Vegetable Gardening : How to Grow Sweet Potatoes

default Vegetable Gardening : How to Grow Sweet Potatoes

Sweet potato plants should be placed right in the ground about 2 inches deep, and they should be well-watered. Find out why sweet potatoes flourish in hot conditions withhelp from an organic farmer in this free video on vegetable gardening and horticulture. Expert: Jarrett Man Contact: stonesoupfarm.googlepages.com Bio: Jarrett Man created and runs Stone Soup Farm, an organic vegetable and fruit operation in Belchertown, Mass. Filmmaker: EquilibrioFilms Jenn

Related posts:

  1. Vegetable & Fruit Gardening : How to Grow Eggplant
  2. Vegetable Gardening : How to Grow Green Peppers
  3. Organic Vegetable Gardening.
  4. Free Organic Vegetable Gardening At Home.
  5. Home Vegetable Gardening: A Complete and Practical Guide to the Planting and Care of All Vegetables, Fruits and Berries Worth Growing for Home Use

20 Responses to Vegetable Gardening : How to Grow Sweet Potatoes

  1. bohemiangrove

    @OS253 a sweet potatoes is not an potato. They just call it sweet potato

  2. GenaChapman12

    very helpful, thank you. I will now try and grow some. I was most concerned about how the vines grew, but now I know.

  3. ouhouhcflo

    Hi,
    I would have been even more thankful to learn what makes you understand that is the time to harvest and if the frost is passed before you harvest them, if the potatoes will be lost or still good if you harvest just after the frost?!
    When there is a flower, does that mean that one potato or a group of potatoes will be perhaps growing under the plant?
    thanks
    (frenchie who planted some sweet potatoes 4 months ago, Australia)

  4. OS253

    @leesie1984 : I respect your opinions. But all the potatoes are the same to me. Some are sweet and some are plain with no flavor like the standard kind. Do you have a veggie garden? I grow my own potatoes. They all look the same. That’s how I come to conclusion that all potatoes are the same. Thanks for replying.

  5. leesie1984

    @OS253potatoes are potatoes? hardy. sweet potatoes are way better for you than the stardard potato. incomparable

  6. quietsong777

    Really appreciate this video. Thanks for posting Jared!

  7. myleghurts100

    this kid is just a kid what would he now hahahha

  8. FREDLOXWON

    didnt you get schooled on potatoes on another tutorial?

  9. MasterOutdoors

    “Have a question about types of plants, gardening etc. Come to my channel and ask me any questions at all about plants!”

  10. OS253

    Potatoes are potatoes. It doesn’t matter if they’re white or red. They’re both potatoes! Which ones I prefer? I like them all! I eat them year round.

  11. muktismom

    thanks for the clarification – my sweet potatoes have spade leaves.
    AND BTW – I searched a lot of places for information.

  12. growitlikegranddad

    “true” sweet potatoes? There are many kinds of sweet potatoes, and all colors from white to pink to orange to dark red. The true “yam” plant looks NOTHING like this and is a native of Africa (it’s a woody bush). These are definitely sweet potatoes. All sweet potatoes have leaves like these, kind of spade or heart shaped. The yam plant is much more upright and is VERY rarely grown in the western hemisphere (the Americas)

  13. dewinmoonl

    erm yams is actually something completely different. check wiki

  14. muktismom

    just want to add that i did plant from slips – that’s why i’m confused. sounds like what i planted,..

  15. muktismom

    gosh – are those really sweet potatoes? or yams…
    i am growing the true white ones.
    everyone confuses the true sweet potato (white) with the orange yam.
    those look like yams.
    thanks for posting. a reply is appreciated very much!

  16. landrace2010

    he’s hot

  17. splendid07470

    Thank you!

  18. RCvolunteer1978

    Thank you, but here in Florida the drought and no real frost here. IT IS DIFFERENT THEN you was talking about

  19. joeybognar

    thanks

  20. Landercart

    cool

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*

You may use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>