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Technology for growing potatoes in bags. Growing potatoes in containers Growing potatoes in containers

Hello, friends! Today we are solving the food problem on a separate dacha plot. In the conditions of economic sanctions, we will make our contribution to providing our family with vegetables and fill our bins with potatoes. Foreign countries give us sanctions, and in return we will take their experience of growing potatoes on their home plots.

Overseas gardener colleagues are forced to grow potatoes in containers by circumstances related to limited planting space. Judging by the number of publications, this topic is quite in demand on foreign sites.

Potatoes from a barrel

This technology for growing potatoes has its advantages.

— There is no need to cultivate large areas of land.

— There is no need to waste time weeding and hilling potatoes.

— It’s easier to combat pests and plant diseases.

— Saving time on harvesting.

The technology for growing potatoes in containers includes four steps .

Step 1. Choose a container with a volume of approximately 50 liters, up to 90 cm in height. Make several holes in the bottom for drainage. You can use a container without a bottom, but then the container must be placed on soil that drains water well.

Step 2. For planting, potatoes are germinated. To do this, take it into a bright, cool room and lay it out in one layer in cardboard boxes, excluding direct sunlight from falling on it.

A 15 cm thick layer of moss and a mixture of fertile soil and compost are placed at the bottom of the container. About 8 tubers are planted in the prepared soil, leaving a sufficient distance between them. The tubers are covered with a mixture of soil and compost in a layer of 15 cm and well moistened with water. The soil should always be slightly moist. The main thing here is not to overdo it with watering.

Step 3. When the stems rise 15-18 cm, add soil-compost mixture to their middle. This operation is repeated several times as the stems grow.

Step 4. Harvest. After the end of the growing season, the condition of the upper tubers is checked. After making sure that they are ripe, they begin harvesting the potatoes. Lay out a tarpaulin and tip the container onto it. All that remains is to harvest a generous potato harvest.

Potatoes from a box

A vertical bed can also be built from scraps of boards. As the potato tops grow, boards are wound onto the bars and a new layer of soil mixture is added. Fresh potatoes begin to be removed from the lower rows. To do this, remove the bottom row of boards and remove the tubers. The soil is then returned to the box and the boards are nailed back down. Next time, a similar action is performed with the overlying layer. Thus, going up, you can remove the tubers as they ripen.

Potatoes from the net

Another idea is a vertical bed made of metal fence mesh. First, the mesh is rolled into a cylindrical container, tying the edges with wire. Then the bottom and walls are covered with a layer of straw and filled with soil mixture. Then everything is repeated, as in the previous examples.

Another option described by the author is when planting potatoes are laid around the perimeter of the container in 3 layers, separated by layers of soil mixture. In this case, the sprouts of the lower layers begin to grow through the walls of the container. When planting 4 kg of varietal potatoes, the yield was up to 25 kg per container.

Potatoes from tires

Another option for growing potatoes deserves attention - in car tires. Potatoes are planted in a soil mixture that fills the bottom tire. As the potato tops grow, the tires are stacked on top of each other and a soil-compost mixture is added.

Here, too, harvesting is done without a shovel. Remove the tires and separate the tubers from the soil with your hands.

Various plastic bags of sufficient volume and plastic garbage containers are used as containers for potatoes.

Another interesting option that is worth paying attention to manufacturers of various products for summer residents. Some countries have launched the production of ready-made containers for growing potatoes. There is no need to invent anything here anymore. A container that is beautiful in appearance will become a decoration for your garden. Access to the potatoes is provided by closing windows at the bottom of the container.

Of course, any new technologies must first be tested in our conditions before introducing them en masse on your site.

Try it, experiment! Have a good harvest this year! Or, in the language of old Soviet posters: “Let's catch up and overtake America!”

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Planting potatoes this way is a thing of the past. The method is based on the fact that potatoes can form stolons with tubers along the entire length of the stem, no matter how long it is (if, of course, the stem is placed in the soil). To do this, they used to plant potatoes in holes, gradually filling them with earth, or in barrels. A modern option is planting in a collapsible container.

The point of the design is the ability to build up the walls of the box, gradually filling it with soil. Watering is carried out through leaky pipes. The easiest way is to drive four pieces of reinforcement or stakes into the ground and attach board walls to them with wire.

The bottom must breathe. We place boards on the bricks, leaving gaps between them. The size of the container is arbitrary, for example 1.5 × 1.5 m with a height of 1.2 m. It turns out 5-6 floors of boards. We assemble the first floor from the walls and fill it with a light organic mixture. Ideal: humus and expanded clay screenings in equal parts. We plant well-sprouted and processed tubers. If you plant early (and the earlier, the better!), cover the container with film.

The tops will grow just above the second floor, we install new boards and add soil again. And so on until the buds appear. To prevent them from appearing too early, you need to water each floor with a portion of manure compost and protect the container from heat: shade it from the sun and mulch the soil with straw or sawdust.

With the appearance of buds, we finish construction and create good conditions for the plants - we feed them with compost, herbal infusion, and save them from all misfortunes, if any arise. When the harvest is ripe, we disassemble the container and select the tubers, and remove the soil until next year. We clean the boards, dry them and put them away until the next construction site.

On our plot about fifteen years ago we began planting potatoes in a multi-storey way. I knocked down a container from boards (see Fig. 1.) 3.5 m long, 1.7 m wide, 1.3 m high.


We planted the Lukyanovsky and American varieties. There are 20 bushes in total. The result exceeded all expectations! The harvest amounted to 490 kg (!) of selected tubers and 3 buckets of small ones.
Moreover, we did not yet know that the best tubers on the stems form late varieties.

We have been using one container for 4 years. To prevent the boards from rotting, I covered them with film from the inside using a stapler.
And further. It is worth paying special attention to the lightness of the soil (more loose organic matter), nutrition (liquid fertilizing, early planting) and protection from the heat. Gaps can be left in the side walls of the container so that fertilizing can be done through a hose and watering can.

Potatoes from a container July 26th, 2016

As soon as I told you about mineon growing potatoes in sawdust, I immediately received a question: I need details on growing them in a container. And after my list of what is possible, it was simply impossible to put off telling me how I plant potatoes in a container and get a harvest at least 2 times a season.

I'll start with what kind of container this is and what you can replace it with if you don't have one. I have a 20-liter professional container made of black plastic with many drainage holes and small protrusions-legs to allow excess water to flow freely when watering or heavy rain. Large seedlings, such as Christmas trees or fruit-bearing apple trees, are sold in such containers. This container lasts 8-10 years.

In principle, such a container can be bought. But I don't think you need that kind of expense. It’s easier to replace it, for example, with a 12-15 liter plastic bucket, which are sold in hardware stores for mixing solutions. Its price is reasonable, the plastic is durable. All you have to do is cut or drill 5-6 round holes with a diameter of 3 cm in the bottom and 5-6 holes at the very bottom of the walls. Be sure to add drainage (pebbles, crushed stone, expanded clay) to the bottom in a layer of at least 5 cm.

You can even grow potatoes in a plastic or propylene bag.

To grow potatoes we will need:

some rotten chopped grass

about half a bucket of garden soil

a tablespoon of superphosphate and a teaspoon of potassium sulfate

half a gallon of mullein solution.

All this should occupy half the volume of the container.

As soon as the soil settles and is saturated with the solution, sprinkle it a little with garden soil and lay out the sprouted tubers. In my case, 2 pieces per 20-liter container. For germination, I take early variety tubers (I buy food-grade young potatoes with already hardened skins), wash them in a solution of potassium permanganate and bury them in damp sawdust for 10-14 days. By the time of planting, excellent roots and several small shoots appear on the tubers.

I lightly sprinkle the tubers with garden soil. If the soil is dry, I water it.

Then I cover it with damp old sawdust in a 5 cm layer.

As the potatoes grow, I will regularly add wet sawdust and water them with a weak solution of mullein every 2 weeks. And from the beginning of flowering, spray twice with an interval of 10 days with a solution of potassium monophosphate (1 teaspoon per 10 liters of water). I'll pick off the flowers. I spray it with phytosporin solution twice with an interval of 14 days.

And, of course, I will have the container in a sunny, well-lit and warmed place. If autumn comes early with cold weather and frosts, I will move the container to the greenhouse.

Here's some more experience to add to your treasure chest. I am sure that this experience will surprise experienced summer residents, as it surprised me.

I came to visit my sister in a small European country. Vegetable gardens and gardens are small and neat. And my sister boasted that she had her own potatoes, grown in a special way. And now I’m describing it. Here is my sister's story.

Here in the suburbs, we simply don't have much land to work with. In some areas of the neighbors there is even rocky soil.

Local residents believe that growing potatoes in containers saves this crop from diseases such as blight (Phtophthora infestans).

How to Grow Potatoes in Containers

One of the coolest containers for growing potatoes is a grain basket. Volume approximately 27kg. If you don't have a grain basket like this, you can use a 5-gallon bucket or trash can as long as you make drainage holes in the bottom of the container.

Usually only one seed tuber is planted per bucket. But you can plant at least three in a grain basket. The same goes for the trash bin.

Where to start?

First you need to fill the container halfway with compost. By the way, compost, if prepared correctly, is also a disease suppressant, so you have an additional good measure against fungal diseases of potatoes.

Spread the seed potatoes on top of the compost in the container and add enough compost on top of the seeds to cover them. As the plants grow, add more compost to cover the tubers. They should always be under the soil. Continue to cover the tubers as the plants grow higher than the top of your container.

In the summer, a couple of weeks after your potatoes bloom, simply dig your fingers into the soil and harvest the potatoes you need for your favorite recipes: side dishes, barbecues, or salads. This way you can harvest in parts over several weeks. Another idea is to simply wait until the tops die, turn the container over and pick out the entire potato crop at once.

Water the potatoes slowly so that the soil gets wet and not all around the container.

What other containers can be used for growing potatoes?

How about a big cardboard box? This will be great for one season and you can compost the box later too! Simply fold and tuck the lid inside the box. Dig some soil into the ground to a depth of 10 cm, place the box in this hole.

Even a laundry basket makes a great container for growing potatoes.

Some hobbyists plant potatoes in used car tires. This should not be done! Already proven by scientists.

This is the story I wrote down from the words of my relative.

I give it to your site. Veronica Sh-va, Vologda

Gleb Kuzmin from Saratov shares his secret: Our summer residents love experiments. Sometimes the size of the plot forces them to do this. You can’t really do much on 6 acres - you have to grow a garden and plant a vegetable garden. And potatoes, they require space. So we have to invent different ways of growing it.

It allows you to save space on the site. It is enough to plant tubers in it and just water it, and you can forget about the labor-intensive procedure of hilling or adding.

To make a container you will need a piece of metal mesh with a large mesh. We wrap the mesh around the metal barrel and secure its ends. We take out the resulting blank and get the base of the container in the form of a pipe with a diameter of 90 cm and a height of 1.5 m. We will plant seed potatoes in it.

We place the container on its side and lay about 10 cm thick straw from the inside along the wall. Then we place this container in a convenient place on the site. Here it will remain until harvest. Pour a layer of soil fertilized with compost inside, no higher than 40 centimeters from the surface, and water it. We plant seed potatoes on top in a circle at a distance of 10-15 cm from each other. We fill it with a second layer of soil and plant the tubers again. There will be three such layers in total in the container.

The soil in such a container will warm up quickly. The tubers will germinate and sprouts will break through the scrap and mesh. The potatoes will bloom and the gardener will only have to water them and wait for the harvest to ripen.”

Or even in bags: