Seed 'Taters we purchased at Parsley's Feed Store |
Seed potatoes from last year's crop |
Last night Benjamin wanted to wrestle, but before we wrestled we had to cut up our seed potatoes. I wanted to teach him how it's done. He's helped me plant them before, but never cut them up. Sometimes I want to do everything, but I need to step back and teach him how to do different things so he'll build up different skills. Many times it is easier and quicker to do things yourself, but by doing that, you rob the next generation of knowledge. In the old days kids apprenticed or learned a trade from their father, but too many times these days we make things easy on them by doing things for them instead and it comes back to bite them in the backside when they don't know 'diddly squat' about much anything.
The reason that you want to cut up potatoes is that one potato can give you numerous potato plants. Every eye will yield a new plant, so you can cut off chunks of the potato that have an eye, being real careful not to damage the sprouted eye. Here you can see that Benjamin is slicing the potato right between two sprouted eyes.
Cutting up seed potatoes |
It's usually best to flip the potato over before you make your cut to make sure that you aren't cutting off a sprout. Sometimes you can get four or five different cuts out of one seed potato.
Slicing and dicing |
In the end, we have a nice box of cut seed potatoes and Benjamin learned a new skill that maybe he'll show his son one day. We'll put these aside for a few days so that the cut pieces have a chance to "scab" over. I've heard that if you plant them immediately, it heightens the chance that the potato will rot in the ground before it has an opportunity to grow.
We're looking at the beginnings of the 2014 crop |
I think that cutting up seed potatoes is a good lesson for us. Many times you'll hear farmers and gardeners say, "Don't eat your seed." See, these potatoes would've made a nice meal, boiled and then mashed with some butter, a little garlic maybe, with a sprinkling of grated cheddar cheese and green onions on top. But cutting up perfectly fine potatoes for seed is an exercise in faith. We're not going to eat our seed. We are sacrificing enjoyment now for a greater reward later - delayed gratification, they call it.
Hopefully, this foregoing of benefit now will yield an abundant return when we harvest potatoes in May and see that this tray of seed potatoes has given us buckets and buckets of potatoes that we will be able to enjoy for months. We'll see in a few months if this was a worthwhile endeavor!
Hopefully, this foregoing of benefit now will yield an abundant return when we harvest potatoes in May and see that this tray of seed potatoes has given us buckets and buckets of potatoes that we will be able to enjoy for months. We'll see in a few months if this was a worthwhile endeavor!
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