I dug at the base of the potato plant, Russ pulled the roots, shook the dirt off and pulled the potatoes off, while Benjamin looked around in the loosened soil for potatoes that broke loose from the roots. We filled bucket after bucket with beautiful potatoes.
The potato harvest |
The job is done! Here are are the harvesters posing with a shovel in front of the spot formerly occupied by potato plants. I'll wait for a rain and then plant purple hull peas, butter beans and more green beans in the same spot.
Work is done! |
Look at all the potatoes, Dad! |
Here is another view where the harvesters are tilting the buckets to show the yield. This was probably our best potato harvest ever. I didn't take the time to weigh them, but it is a lot of spuds.
Loads of potatoes |
A tomato on a potato plant? |
What is this thing? |
In summary, potato plants fruit and these green berries are the fruit! They look like tomatoes since potatoes and tomatoes are in the nightshade family of plants. Normally, you don't see them because it usually gets hot quickly. We've had an unseasonably long and cool Spring (I'm not complaining) and those conditions promote fruiting in potatoes. You can plant the seeds from the fruit and actually grow potatoes, but it is much easier to grow them by planting the potato where the new plants will sprout from the 'eyes.'
I'm glad that we didn't eat the "tomato-looking thing" on the potato plant. I learned in the article that potato fruits are likely to be high in solanine, a substance that is toxic to humans, particularly children. Potato fruits should not be eaten, no matter how much they look like tomatoes!
Ya learn something every day!!
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