How To Plant Potatoes That Have Sprouted

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Interested in growing potatoes from sprouted tubers? In this informative video, we share valuable tips and techniques for successfully planting potatoes that have sprouted. We'll cover the process of preparing sprouted potato tubers for planting, including selecting the right planting location, preparing the soil, and cutting the tubers for optimal growth. Additionally, we'll discuss planting depth, spacing, and watering requirements to ensure healthy potato plant development. Whether you're a beginner gardener or an experienced potato enthusiast, this video provides essential guidance to help you maximize your potato harvest from sprouted tubers. Don't let those sprouted potatoes go to waste – watch now and learn how to turn them into a bountiful potato crop!
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I greatly appreciate the information-rich video that is concise and free of unnecessary content. Thank you!

courtpour
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I have gotten better at growing potatoes over the years. Thank you for this video, have a nice week!

driverguy
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Opened up my compost for the first time all winter and I had a bunch of potatoes sprouting.

pshaw
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I’ve never done it. I’m excited to try it out. I was talking to my friends grandma and was making fun of the growth in my party with our garlic and potatoes lol. She told me to put it in the ground and wellp you never question a grandma so here I am learning more about it. Thank you for sharing this video and info 🙂

shinebright
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Thanks for the informative video. I found a couple of potatoes in my bag of potatoes that had baby potatoes growing off of them. How do I grow those?

Sundialk
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Some advice please on planting two crops in one summer. This year I used last year's potatoes from the root cellar, as I always do. Yes they had plenty of sprouts, some a couple feet long. It is early August in PA now and I harvested the first crop in mid-July. Good yield.
Now I want to run a second crop that I can harvest in late Sept or October. I figure if I put these in the root cellar, the average temperature will be quite a bit lower there than the ones I just harvested in July. Hoping this keeps the second batch in storage better. My experience is that the July harvest is usually good for about 9 - 10 months, and then they just get too sprouty to eat. The later crop should last another 3 months, supplying me with potatoes for 12 months of the year.
Trouble is, of the taters I planted in early July only about 30% of them came up, and it took a month for those to emerge above the soil surface. My guess is that they sat in storage for too long (12 months). Or perhaps it was the summer heat? I dunno. What do you think? Thx!

andrewhanson
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is it like each eye becomes a potato or multiple potatoes?

JeffreyBowers-zkvs
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Seed providers will tell you that you need to plant special SEED potatoes available only from them, Uh Huh. Go to the grocery and buy some potatoes that you would like to plant. store in a cool dry place until you see they have sprouted eyes. Cut these potatoes into cubes where each cube has an eye. Plant. Your cubes will sprout into beautiful potato plants with delicious potatoes on their roots. Potato plants grow so well and so easy.

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ourv