2021: Potatoes

Of all the things I’ve planted this year, potatoes have caused the most worry.

I’ve grown potatoes twice before. Once they did well, once they did nothing at all. According to my reference book, I could plant them April 1. The shipping schedule of my supplier should have had them here in plenty of time to prep and plant by then. The Covid-corrupted shipping schedule had them here a month late. I threw them in their grow bags between 12 hour shifts at work and hoped for the best.

They’re growing like gangbusters. They’ve been in the dirt a month and they already have flowers forming. I think flowers mean the tubers are growing, and the tubers cannot be exposed to light because that makes them turn green and green tubers are poisonous. So yesterday I frantically threw more dirt on them before another 12 hour shift at work. It was the second time I had “hilled” more dirt around the stems. It was also the last, because now I am out of dirt.

I’m worried that the yield in the grow bags won’t be substantial enough to be cost effective. In the grocery store conventionally grown potatoes are about $0.80 per pound. Organic are $1.50 per pound. I spent $19.95 on seed potatoes. I’ll have to grow 13.3 pounds of potatoes (I used the organic cost) to break even. I don’t think that’s gonna happen.

I’ll have to see if I can squeeze another raised bed into the space allotted me for next year. Even a 4′ x 4′ bed would be triple the growing area of the two grow bags. It’s worth investigating.

Update: August 9, 2021: My concerns about yield were well founded. Each grow bag only produced about five pounds of potatoes, which is better than nothing I suppose, but certainly not what I was hoping for. I’m not blaming the potatoes, though. Any shortcomings were definitely my fault. They did the best they could in the space they had. Next year I have to make room for them in one of the raised beds.

June 29, 2021: On Track To Meet My Goal?

THE TIME ASPECT:

So far we’re 99 days into a 245 day growing season. The unofficial start of my growing season was March 23 (The day I direct seeded the beets, carrots and sugar snap peas outside, in the garden) and will probably end around November 23 (The day I pull most of the carrots for Thanksgiving dinner). I did start a bunch of stuff inside, under the lights, in February, but that doesn’t really count. So lets see if I’m on track.

99 days/245 days * 100 = 40.41%

So 40.41% of the growing season is past, have I grown 40.41% of the vegetables I said I was going to grow? The yield through June 29 is 93.01 pounds.

93.01 lbs./375 lbs. *100 = 24.80%

No, I have not. Not even close.

I’m worried, but hopeful, for three reasons.

  1. Onions: They occupied all of Bed #2 for the last three months, but contributed nothing to the above total. That will change in the next few weeks.
  2. Summer stuff: I imagine once the summer stuff starts coming in (hello, zucchini!) the numbers should add up quickly.
  3. Another round of cabbage: I harvested 40 pounds of it in the spring. I’m counting on a fall crop of another 40 to put me over the top.

THE SPACE ASPECT:

As I’ve mentioned in other posts, I’ve got about 208 square feet to work with. That means I have to produce 1.8 pounds of vegetables per square foot, or 57.6 pounds per 4′ x 8′ bed. How am I doing?

Bed #1: kohlrabi and cabbage, 11.99 + 42.70 = 54.69 pounds. Almost there! And now the cole crops have been replaced with tomatoes, peppers and eggplant.

Bed #2: onions, not harvested yet, 0 pounds.

Bed #3: sugar snap peas, carrots and beets, 3.3 + 4.74 + 15.38 = 23.42 pounds. Oh dear. Not even halfway there.

Bed #4: broccoli, 8.15 pounds. Long way (49.45 pounds) to go! Hopefully the corn and butternut squash that’s planted there now makes up for it.

Bed #5: no spring crop, 0 pounds.

Bed #6: lettuce and radishes, 6.52 + 0.23 = 6.75 pounds. Well, I suppose it’s better than nothing. The salad bed started out good in April but fell apart in June. It’s time to get serious about salad.

So, space wise, the yield looks like this:

93.01 lbs/ 208 square feet = 0.45 lbs/square foot, which is 25% of the 1.8 lbs/square foot goal.

CONCLUSION:

With 40% of the growing season gone, I’ve only produced 25% of my goal. I am officially behind schedule.

2021: Spring Cabbage

5 heads of cabbage

The cabbage did well this spring. I started eight plants on February 15th and transplanted them into the garden the first week of April. They were fertilized twice with a liquid organic fertilizer at half strength before going into the ground. They were covered with a row cover after going into the ground. The bed had been prepped with compost and organic fertilizer. The five heads to the right are the last of the spring crop, harvested on June 18th. The variety is Ferry’s Round Dutch and I used Ferry Morse seeds.

The spring total was 42.7 pounds, and I’m so proud of me and my cabbages! But now is not the time to rest on our laurels! Now is the time to make Stuffed Cabbage, and Ham and Cabbage, and Coleslaw and Borscht (I have beets to use up too)! Now is also the time to start our fall crop of cabbage. Another eight plants should suffice.

2021: Growing Spring Beets and Carrots

I direct seeded these guys in the garden on March 23. The two pictures below show what they looked like on April 19th and May 31st.

If you look carefully at the first picture, you can just about make out the two rows of beets: one on each side of the tape measure. Then there’s a row of tiny little carrot tops in the center, and a row of sugar snap pea seedlings against the back of the bed.

In the second picture the beet and carrot tops are a foot tall and the sugar snap peas are growing over the top of the trellis.

The tape measure is there because I was thinning them out. What a tedious job that is! Even for just an eight foot row. But necessary. I made sure the carrots were spaced two inches apart and the beets, three.

I used Ferry Morse seeds for both root crops. The beets are Detroit Dark Red and the carrots are Rainbow Mix.

beets

The beets could be harvested any time now.

small carrots

The carrots are a bit small. They need another week or so in the ground.

2021: Tiny Tomatoes!

I love tomatoes. Even when they look like this:

funny looking tomatoes
Tomatoes from 2020: Weird year, weird tomatoes

Which is why I was so excited when I saw this in the garden this morning (June 4, 2021).

tiny tomato growing on tomato plant
First tomato of the season

This is a variety from Burpee called “Steak Sandwich.” I started three of this variety, one of “Jubilee” and one of “Cherokee Purple” on March 15, and I transplanted them into the garden in mid-May. Three are in grow bags and 2 are in the raised beds. At this rate, I might have a ripe tomato or two by the Fourth of July!

Yield Tracker 2021

carrots growing in December

Through December 31:

448.98 lbs. harvested, 73.98 lbs. over goal!

Through November 30:

445.99 lbs. harvested, 70.99 lbs. over goal!

Through October 31:

442.55 lbs. harvested, 67.55 lbs. over goal!

Through September 30:

361.94 lbs. harvested, 13.06 lbs. to go!

Through August 31:

293.03 lbs. harvested, 81.97 lbs. to go!

Through July 31:

196.14 lbs. harvested, 178.86 lbs. to go!

Through June 30:

93.01 lbs. harvested, 281.99 lbs. to go!

Through May 31:

27.34 lbs. harvested, 347.66 lbs. to go!

Through April 30:

0.67 lbs. harvested, 374.33 lbs. to go!