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Beginner Flowers: Digging up Sweet Potato Vines

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Forum: Beginner FlowersReplies: 46, Views: 234
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venice62
Indianapolis, IN
(Zone 5b)

August 16, 2009
08:30 PM

Post #6954509

I am in zone 5B. Do I need to dig up the roots of my Sweet Potato Vines? If I do how do I store them? I divided up my one plant and now have 5 plants. I don't want to root them inside. Will they just dry up?

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dp72
Woodway, TX
(Zone 8a)

August 16, 2009
09:30 PM

Post #6954758

Just before the first hard freeze, dig them up. Remove all vines and hairy roots and brush off the soil and wrap each one, loosely, in newspaper. Put in a box or bag, making sure air can circulate and that none of them touch. (The newspaper should prevent that.) Store them in a place where they won't be exposed to temps below 38 degrees all winter but preferably where it's not too warm. They will begin to put out slips in mid to late spring. You can plant them in pots early spring if you can keep them away from freezing temps, or in the ground when the ground temps are warming up.
venice62
Indianapolis, IN
(Zone 5b)

August 16, 2009
09:34 PM

Post #6954776

Dp, I can put them in my 2nd bedroom that I don't heat but there is not air circulating in it. Should I put a fan in there? Is that good enough?
dp72
Woodway, TX
(Zone 8a)

August 16, 2009
10:51 PM

Post #6955070

That sounds perfect. There is no chance the tubers would freeze in that room, I would think. You might unwrap them every 4 or 6 weeks to make sure none are rotting. They would need to be removed. That is very unlikely to happen.
You are going to be so proud of yourself next year when you have all those tubers to plant. As they sprout, you can take cuttings and start new plants. S potatoes are about the easiest thing there is to grow from cuttings. Start them in POTTING MIX, not water. Water propagation is never as good as using potting soil/mix.
Next spring if you have very large tubers you can cut them in half, let them DRY in the open air for about a week to let the wounds heal, then you will have twice as many to plant.
venice62
Indianapolis, IN
(Zone 5b)

August 17, 2009
07:43 AM

Post #6955785

You said to start them in potting mix. When do I do that? And keep them in the house?
Mbfirey
Pageland, SC

August 19, 2009
01:22 PM

Post #6965089

Boil or bake them, then add brown sugar and a little bit of butter ;-)
venice62
Indianapolis, IN
(Zone 5b)

August 19, 2009
01:58 PM

Post #6965189

Does a Blackie Sweet Potato Vine grow regular sweet potatoes?
Mbfirey
Pageland, SC

August 19, 2009
03:20 PM

Post #6965460

I haven't tried them myself but I've heard that they can be eaten.
dp72
Woodway, TX
(Zone 8a)

August 19, 2009
10:17 PM

Post #6966919

There are over 15 varieties of ornamental sweet potatoes, and all are real sweet potatoes. However, they were picked out because of their pretty foliage and not the quality of the tuber for eating. Some have long, skinny tubers, and others have shorter fatter ones. There's no reason not to eat them, except if you want to plant them to get ornamental vines you can't eat your cake and have it too. Most don't have much flavor. If you want a good eating sweet potato it's best to buy ones at the market. They will grow you a vine just like the ornamental kind if you plant them, but they aren't as fancy. If you're old enough to remember, women used to put one part way in a jar of water, let it sprout vines, and grow it in the house, usually in the kitchen on a window sill. They're right pretty.
I've rooted a lot of slips and planted them in containers out back this growing season. Probably 8 varieties from light red to almost black. Various leaf shapes. These are strictly for saving the tubers for next spring. I am in Master Gardeners. We have a plant sale once a year and I'm going to propagate a lot of these for the sale.
There is a good tutorial on Dave's on how to start slips with a tuber in water in a container like Tupperware during the late winter. That way you get a head start on spring. I did it this past winter and it was fun. If you can't find it doing a search I'll try to find and post where it is.
pirl
Southold, NY
(Zone 7a)

August 20, 2009
07:33 AM

Post #6967722

I agree that buying sweet potatoes is a better taste choice.

A sweet potato in a container of water was the very first plant I ever grew. I still have the pretty container right next to me as I type. Fond memories.
dp72
Woodway, TX
(Zone 8a)

August 20, 2009
09:39 AM

Post #6968073

Pirl, thanks for sharing that. I remember many homes where sweet potato vines were draped along the walls. There was a restaurant that had them everywhere. They were cheap and easy to grow. I think that was before Devil's Ivy came along as a popular indoor vine.
pirl
Southold, NY
(Zone 7a)

August 20, 2009
09:51 AM

Post #6968099

Was Devil's Ivy philodendron?
dp72
Woodway, TX
(Zone 8a)

August 20, 2009
11:18 AM

Post #6968423

The name used to be pothos. I'm not sure what the botanical name is now. Down here in the South it was the only "ivy" except for English ivy. People didn't know what philodendrons were except there were a few of the huge monsteras- split-leaf- here and there. The "devil's ivy" is a lighter shade of green than philo. and usually variegated.
pirl
Southold, NY
(Zone 7a)

August 20, 2009
01:43 PM

Post #6968948

Right! I have the golden pothos on my porch. The philodendron was all green, right?
dp72
Woodway, TX
(Zone 8a)

August 20, 2009
05:54 PM

Post #6969752

I've never seen a variegated philodendron, although there could be one. Aren't pothos leaves wider and bigger overall than the vining philo? I like both, but for some reason hardly anybody here grows philo.
Did you know that if pothos is allowed to climb the leaves get much larger?
pirl
Southold, NY
(Zone 7a)

August 20, 2009
06:40 PM

Post #6969919

Yes, I put some cuttings outside early one year - probably mid May - and they grew huge! Pothos are (to me) more heart shaped, shiny and prettier due to the variegation. My mom grew both on the interior front porches we had and she had them trained above windows.
dp72
Woodway, TX
(Zone 8a)

August 20, 2009
07:26 PM

Post #6970052

Right- more SHINY. Philo leaves have almost a matte finish. I think there is a solid green pothos, or maybe that is just when they don't get enough light they have more green to them.
JasperDale
Long Beach, CA
(Zone 10a)

August 20, 2009
11:25 PM

Post #6970862

Pothos and the vining philodendron's ( Syngoniums) will grow outdoors here in a really shaded location.

I just re-did a garden under an exterior stairway and added variegated Pothos (the white/marbled one) and some very cool new Syngonium's with PINK leaves. (New to me, at least...) I'd never seen these before and found them at a 99 cent store ...(but they were $2.50 each...go figya...) they make a good low ground cover for shade and will climb if there's something for them to attach themselves to.
pirl
Southold, NY
(Zone 7a)

August 21, 2009
06:47 AM

Post #6971472

Even here the pothos wants dappled shade (and so do I).
Jim41
Delhi, LA

August 29, 2009
12:31 AM

Post #7000329

If you want to see how to bed sweet potatoes, come see me this spring. The biggest sweet potatoe grower in the U.S. is right up the road from me. He beds about 80 acres to supplie his slips. Puts them in the ground and covers them with clear plastic and throws dirt over the edge of the plastic to keep out air. Then he forgets them until the weather gets warm enough not to frost. Takes up the plastic and pulls the slips and plants them. No roots no nothing. They root right in the ground. If it turns dry he waters them. Also cuts off most of the foliage before he plants. When I was a kid we used to take a pointed stick and poke a hole in the ground, put in a slip and take our heel and mash the dirt tight around it.
venice62
Indianapolis, IN
(Zone 5b)

August 29, 2009
09:10 AM

Post #7000799

So what is a slip?
pirl
Southold, NY
(Zone 7a)

August 29, 2009
09:20 AM

Post #7000821

A piece of the potato with an eye.
dp72
Woodway, TX
(Zone 8a)

August 29, 2009
09:27 AM

Post #7000847

Most people call a sprout from a sweet potato a slip. Sweet potatoes don't have eyes like Irish potatoes do.
venice62
Indianapolis, IN
(Zone 5b)

August 29, 2009
09:28 AM

Post #7000850

So if you take a piece of sweet potato with an eye, plant it, it becomes a whole potato? Can you do that with white potatoes also?

You have to get a sweet potato to sprout first before you plant it? How?

This message was edited Aug 29, 2009 8:30 AM
pirl
Southold, NY
(Zone 7a)

August 29, 2009
09:42 AM

Post #7000886

The slip grows and creates sweet potatoes via the vines.

You just look for growing eyes. If you leave an untreated sweet potato out at room temperature you should get sprouts. Many people buy slips for all kinds of potatoes.
Jim41
Delhi, LA

August 29, 2009
02:40 PM

Post #7001822

You can just put the sweet potatoe in the ground and cover it. It will begin to send up sprouts. When they are about a foot tall you just pull them out of the potatoe and plant them. These are called slips. To plant Irish potatoes, you cut off an eye leaving a good part of the potatoe attached to it. The eye is a growth but and is what sprouts. You plant the eye about an inch and one half deep. The spout feeds off the portion of potato you leave with it until it can put down roots. While you can plant any potatoe eye it is best to buy seed potatoes if you want a good harvest. Eyes planted off the potatoes you buy in the store usually don't make to good.
Jim41
Delhi, LA

August 29, 2009
02:42 PM

Post #7001833

By the way, when you pull up your sweet potatoe vines and harvest the tubers, don't wash them. This will make them rot. Just brush off the soil and put them in a cool dry place. They store real good.
venice62
Indianapolis, IN
(Zone 5b)

August 29, 2009
03:06 PM

Post #7001912

Thanks, for all the info. I put it with the info I copied earlier.

I cut that one sweet potato vine I had into 5 plants. They sure are hardy and a couple are covering my other flowers! However, the color looks good next to my Lamb's Ears which are hardy also. I saved all the seeds but can't imagine using any of them.
dp72
Woodway, TX
(Zone 8a)

August 29, 2009
06:03 PM

Post #7002410

What seeds?
I used to wash my tubers before storing them, and they didn't rot- they did just fine. But I found out it wasn't necessary so quit doing it.
If you do wash them, they need to dry completely before you store them. Better still, DON'T wash them.
venice62
Indianapolis, IN
(Zone 5b)

August 29, 2009
06:25 PM

Post #7002470

My Lamb's Ear seeds! Not the tubers.
pirl
Southold, NY
(Zone 7a)

August 29, 2009
08:10 PM

Post #7002785

I was wondering about the seeds as well!
venice62
Indianapolis, IN
(Zone 5b)

August 29, 2009
08:29 PM

Post #7002851

lol Sometimes I don't clearly say what I mean!
pirl
Southold, NY
(Zone 7a)

August 29, 2009
08:31 PM

Post #7002856

And then you get to be my age and say clearly what you don't mean!
venice62
Indianapolis, IN
(Zone 5b)

August 29, 2009
08:50 PM

Post #7002924

lol Now pirl, how old are you?
pirl
Southold, NY
(Zone 7a)

August 29, 2009
08:53 PM

Post #7002929

Two weeks younger than Jim!
venice62
Indianapolis, IN
(Zone 5b)

August 29, 2009
09:00 PM

Post #7002949

LOL Now, how old does that make me!
pirl
Southold, NY
(Zone 7a)

August 29, 2009
09:03 PM

Post #7002956

Very young. A mere child!
venice62
Indianapolis, IN
(Zone 5b)

August 29, 2009
09:04 PM

Post #7002961

Well, aren't you a sweet one!!
pirl
Southold, NY
(Zone 7a)

August 29, 2009
09:05 PM

Post #7002964

A very young person who kills verbascum but still young! Ha! :-)
venice62
Indianapolis, IN
(Zone 5b)

August 29, 2009
09:07 PM

Post #7002970

I know!!! I pulled the sweet potato vines over Stuby so I don't have to think about him!
pirl
Southold, NY
(Zone 7a)

August 29, 2009
09:38 PM

Post #7003044

Good. I'm still "rooting" for him.
venice62
Indianapolis, IN
(Zone 5b)

August 29, 2009
09:54 PM

Post #7003129

I know stuby appreciates your optimism until he can get a leg up!
pirl
Southold, NY
(Zone 7a)

August 29, 2009
10:23 PM

Post #7003226

Ha! Then he can put his right leg in and shake it all about.

I have the tee shirt that says, "What if the hokey pokey is what it's all about?"
JasperDale
Long Beach, CA
(Zone 10a)

August 30, 2009
02:59 AM

Post #7003777

LOL ! Good one !
venice62
Indianapolis, IN
(Zone 5b)

August 30, 2009
08:47 AM

Post #7004077

LOL!! Maybe we should get him a set of Leg-os.
pirl
Southold, NY
(Zone 7a)

August 30, 2009
09:32 AM

Post #7004173

Oh boy!
venice62
Indianapolis, IN
(Zone 5b)

August 30, 2009
09:43 AM

Post #7004210

Yep, he is just an old boy, old before his time.

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