Before I was even
finished harvesting last year’s sweet potato crop, I began to plan out how to
trial my sweet potato varieties for this year. The delay between placing my
order in November and receiving the sweet potatoes in a battered priority
shipping box in May provided me time to think about how I could prepare to have
a better harvest this year.
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My poor-looking Purple Delight Slips |
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The battered priority mailbox that contained my sweet potato slips |
My first encounter
with the sad-looking slips I received in mid-May left me wondering if they
would make it a week, let alone a season, in my garden. Having seen a slight
improvement in the growth of my All-Purple Sweet potatoes in April with the
application of EM-1, I decided to add some EM-1 to the plot. As the slips
finally established themselves I honestly expected very little but still held
out hope for the best.
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My Purple Delight sweet potato slips (to the left of the bush bean) |
The harvest of root
crops can be both exciting and scary - in that the gardener has no idea what
good (or bad) could possibly lie just under the surface of the soil. The longer
the span of time the crop requires to mature, the longer the gardener is left
to imagine how the tubers are growing, with only the top of the plant to give
any clues to the health of what lies below. Revealing what lies under the
ground is like unwrapping a large gift, not knowing beforehand if it contains
something really wonderful or something you would rather give away.
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The area that the Purple Delight covered is in the foreground |
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The Purple Delight Vines take up roughly 1/5 of the area on the bottom left |
Because my life has
been so busy I have not really had the time to take harvesting my sweet
potatoes seriously until a few days ago, when I realized that the night
temperatures would soon dip below freezing. My first priority was to determine
how well the new purple varieties had grown and I wanted to harvest these two
varieties first, so that I could compare them to my All-Purple variety. From
cleaning out some vines in the area of my Purple Delight sweet potato vines I soon
found enough potatoes outside of my garden bed to start filling up a bucket.
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A few Purple Delight potatoes I harvested outside of the garden |
Soon thereafter came
the moment that every gardener either hates or loves: digging to find out what
is in the garden bed. Here are a few pictures I took while digging around:
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Are there any Sweet Potatoes in there? |
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Pulling out the first Sweet Potatoes |
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I think I found something |
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A closer look (the black thing is a soaker hose) |
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Exposing a few more potatoes, the next day. |
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Accessing sweet potatoes sometimes requires me to dig a little |
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The Purple Delight Sweet Potato Crop |
Over time I have
developed three main criteria that I aspire to have my sweet potato crop meet:
Large production, high quality dark flesh, and marketable size and shape.
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This potato turned up to be a bit too big to easily sell |
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My favorite potato retained its beauty and high quality flesh even at a large size |
As shown in the
pictures, the Purple Delight produces well (48+ pounds from one root ball) and the
exhibits a very dark purple color. Although the shape and size of roots varied
greatly there seemed to have been very few (if any) “woody” roots.
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The over 48 pounds of Purple Delight Sweet Potatoes |
Overall, I
would have to say that I have been very pleased with the Purple Delight sweet
potato. Of all people, I would have never dreamed at the outset that the
scrawny slips from a battered box would produce so well.
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