[AT] potato planting

charlie hill charliehill at embarqmail.com
Wed Apr 17 16:36:06 PDT 2013


Ralph that is pretty much what I've been doing the last few years.
I till up a small patch with my garden tiller, dig a hole here and there
and plant a seed spud.  I usually don't plant more than a dozen hills or
so.

Charlie

-----Original Message----- 
From: Ralph Goff 
Sent: Wednesday, April 17, 2013 10:36 AM 
To: Antique tractor email discussion group 
Subject: Re: [AT] potato planting 

On 4/16/2013 4:37 AM, charlie hill wrote:
> We always planted potatoes on top of the row with the
> top of it knocked down but we planted them on 48" rows (middle to middle)
> so that gave us plenty of ability to bed them up plus we were working in
> sandy loam that was good and loose.
>
> Charlie
>
>
I wonder if I am the only one using the old "shovel method" of planting 
potatos? I set up a line of baler twine and two sticks as a guide. Walk 
along with a bucket of seed and shovel. Stick shovel in ground and open 
the soil just enough to drop in the seed. Remove shovel, pack with size 
13 boot and move one step further and repeat.
I admit it is a little labour intensive but I don't plant the whole 
patch in one day. I like the staggered planting method. Usually try to 
get a row in by the first of May although it won't happen this year. 
Then plant another row or two a week later . Sometimes finishing up the 
end of May.  Very often the later seeded ones turn out better but at 
least I have a few early ones to eat in August. Plus, if the early 
plants get frozen by a late frost I still have time to replant.
Planting is no big deal but I find hilling by hand is a workout. By day 
its the heat. In the cool of the evening its the mosquitos.
Oh well, right now that all looks pretty good compared to looking out 
the window at our snowbanks that refuse to melt.

Ralph in Sask.

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