layered potato bed idea
Posted: Fri Mar 22, 2024 11:59 pm
Okay so I have tried lined wash baskets and big plastic towers and a built up walled hill 20" high and 10" raised bed and in-ground with or without hilling and some in grow bags on the ground. Last year my experiment was in ground set a few inches below grade, plus some more potatoes set right at grade (staggered off the initial planting) and then all hilled over with compost. Between sweet corn that was already up. And that worked pretty well.
Anything between raised bed and in ground seems to work well enough. Bags, no, pots, no, barrels, no, wash baskets, no, walled hill, no. Voles took over that walled hill like it was 476AD. They chewed through some of the grow bags set on the ground. Wash baskets are for clothing...they dry out real quick and are UV killed by the end of the season. Bags and stuff are easy harvest but just too dry, without the roots getting down into the ground.
So, in-ground or raised it is..."but wait, there's more!" As Seen On YT! This year I saw a youtube about using cardboard boxes. Just regular cardboard shipping boxes, about 8" tall. Fold top and bottom in to make it topless, bottomless, and double thickness, set that on ground (I would work it first), set a seed potato or two on the ground, cover with some dirt and compost, then straw above it. And wait for the sprouts to grow. Then "hill it" some more with straw, just right in the box. All the potatoes will set in the box, no digging. All the hill material will stay in the box, no blowing away of straw, or hill erosion. That was this video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YouHvONe8bI
Sounds neat, but I guarantee if I did that, there would be voles inside those boxes soon enough. I don't have backyard coyotes or a whole field of potatoes for voles feed on. But, to defend against voles, I think setting the box on a 1/2" hw cloth bottom would stop them. The plants will root down right through the wire, but the potatoes will set at seed level or above, so in the box. Kinda bend the hw cloth edges up, so that the vole will naturally go under. I doubt they would want to walk on top when they can easily tunnel under...they aren't those DC rats! At worse, if they did get in the box, the hole would be visible. I'm also going to set snap traps in pipes across the rows next to the boxes.
.
Question, why bother with boxes if in-ground works great?
Answer, to double deck the row.
It worked last year for me, two levels in ground. But they were all the same type and I still had to dig them all at the same time, late August. So, I plan to do a normal planting of Lehigh a few inches under grade plus hilled a bit, where they are pretty safe from voles. Then, place the boxes in the same row, but between those sets, and plant early potatoes in them. First early, second early, whatever the Brits call them. I like their words better.
So the first early potatoes in boxes should be done a month or so earlier than my "maincrop" Lehighs. The boxes will be a very easy harvest, or even to "grabble", and I don't believe they would affect the later Lehigh harvest very much at all, since they are growing in a totally different level. The boxes would be removed that last month of in ground growth.
What say you? Go ahead, shoot it to pieces. I'm diggin it!
Anything between raised bed and in ground seems to work well enough. Bags, no, pots, no, barrels, no, wash baskets, no, walled hill, no. Voles took over that walled hill like it was 476AD. They chewed through some of the grow bags set on the ground. Wash baskets are for clothing...they dry out real quick and are UV killed by the end of the season. Bags and stuff are easy harvest but just too dry, without the roots getting down into the ground.
So, in-ground or raised it is..."but wait, there's more!" As Seen On YT! This year I saw a youtube about using cardboard boxes. Just regular cardboard shipping boxes, about 8" tall. Fold top and bottom in to make it topless, bottomless, and double thickness, set that on ground (I would work it first), set a seed potato or two on the ground, cover with some dirt and compost, then straw above it. And wait for the sprouts to grow. Then "hill it" some more with straw, just right in the box. All the potatoes will set in the box, no digging. All the hill material will stay in the box, no blowing away of straw, or hill erosion. That was this video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YouHvONe8bI
Sounds neat, but I guarantee if I did that, there would be voles inside those boxes soon enough. I don't have backyard coyotes or a whole field of potatoes for voles feed on. But, to defend against voles, I think setting the box on a 1/2" hw cloth bottom would stop them. The plants will root down right through the wire, but the potatoes will set at seed level or above, so in the box. Kinda bend the hw cloth edges up, so that the vole will naturally go under. I doubt they would want to walk on top when they can easily tunnel under...they aren't those DC rats! At worse, if they did get in the box, the hole would be visible. I'm also going to set snap traps in pipes across the rows next to the boxes.

Question, why bother with boxes if in-ground works great?
Answer, to double deck the row.
It worked last year for me, two levels in ground. But they were all the same type and I still had to dig them all at the same time, late August. So, I plan to do a normal planting of Lehigh a few inches under grade plus hilled a bit, where they are pretty safe from voles. Then, place the boxes in the same row, but between those sets, and plant early potatoes in them. First early, second early, whatever the Brits call them. I like their words better.

So the first early potatoes in boxes should be done a month or so earlier than my "maincrop" Lehighs. The boxes will be a very easy harvest, or even to "grabble", and I don't believe they would affect the later Lehigh harvest very much at all, since they are growing in a totally different level. The boxes would be removed that last month of in ground growth.
What say you? Go ahead, shoot it to pieces. I'm diggin it!