Potato is apparently a lot easier if grown in buckets, both for harvesting and also for the mounding required to get a decent yield. I assume it is approximately the same for sweet potatoes, since they have a similar vine pattern? I actually threw some baby potatoes that had sprouted into a pot recently, but need to buy more dirt to mound them up with. Basically, you plant them in the bottom with just enough dirt to cover them up a bit and let the stalk grow a bit upwards, then bury it up to the tip again and rinse, lather, and repeat until you've filled the bucket. All the various leaf axils will, once interred, turn into roots and in most cases a new potato. (Tomatoes benefit from similar treatment, because they're related plants.) The bucket keeps vermin out (the tunneling kind) and helps with drainage, as a common problem with potatoes is rot from water pooling around the potatoes in the ground. Also, it's a lot easier to harvest without accidentally breaking or spearing your potatoes while digging them up
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The 5-gallon buckets or whatever from Home Depot and whatnot seem to be a favorite for this style of potato growing, provided you drill holes in the bottom for drainage (because sitting water -> rot).
Yes, they do :) Also, if you end up planting a bunch of roses, apparently you can make a pleasant jelly out of rose hips (which is basically the fruit of the rose plant, if we weren't busy snipping all the roses off to stick in vases). They're edible, just kind of tart, hence where making a jelly of them seems to help.
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So roses like acidity, then...? I'll have to do a bit of research before attempting this, heh.
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Yes, they do :) Also, if you end up planting a bunch of roses, apparently you can make a pleasant jelly out of rose hips (which is basically the fruit of the rose plant, if we weren't busy snipping all the roses off to stick in vases). They're edible, just kind of tart, hence where making a jelly of them seems to help.
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