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bruce_g_gw

Potato seed pods

bruce_g
14 years ago

I am in southern Canadian County. My Kennebec potato plants produced seed pods this year. First time I have had this happen. I am interested in saving the seed from these pods and growing them out next season.

These potatoes have done really well this year. In fact I dug a few last night and the wife cooked them up with dinner. They were very good.

Has anyone had any experience in growing our potato seeds? If so I would love to hear your results, advice and instructions on what and what not to do.

Bruce G.

Mustang, OK

Comments (5)

  • Okiedawn OK Zone 7
    14 years ago
    last modified: 9 years ago

    Bruce,

    I don't grow potatoes from seed because potatoes do not reproduce true-to-type from seed in most cases. That's why most potatoes are grown from tubers, a.k.a. seed potatoes.

    Potatoes are inbreeding but when you save seeds, especially from a hybrid, you have no idea what you'll get. Some of the seed-grown plants may give you plants similar to your original Kennebec, but they may not. You may get a wide array of potatoes from your seed and they may or may not be edible and have good flavor/texture.

    If you want to know how to save the seed, here's how:

    Squeeze the seed balls and see how firm they feel. In order for the seeds to be viable, the seed balls (they sort of remind me of small tomatoes) will be a bit soft. It usually takes them a couple of months to get from the "fresh" seed ball stage to the "mature" seed ball stage. Once they are mature, remove them from the plants....or just wait for them to fall off the plants on their own.

    From that point on, you pretty much proceed in the same manner you would if you were saving seed from tomatoes. Cut the potato seed balls in half and squeeze the seeds into a cup. When you have all your seeds in the cup, add enough water to just cover them. The viable seeds will sink to the bottom. Pour off the water and debris, including floating seeds. You might want to add water again and make sure you get all the debris and non-viable seeds removed. Drain the water off the seeds and spread them out on coffee filters to dry. (They'll stick to paper plates, paper towels or napkins, but not to coffee filters.) It is up to you whether or not you choose to ferment the seeds (like you do with tomatoes) for 2-3 days. Some research shows that fermentation improves germination and lessens disease issues.

    To grow potato plants from seed, plant the seeds 1/4 to 1/2" deep in the flats or pots and treat them much the same way you treat tomato seeds, only of course you may start them earlier since potatoes go into the ground a bit earlier than tomatoes do. I'd start the potato seeds 4-6 weeks before my official last frost date, plant them in sterile soil-less seed-starting medium, and put them on a heat mat, if you have one, to speed up germination. You should get germination in about a week. Grow them on the way you grow tomato seedlings. Be sure to harden off the plants before transplanting outside, and plant them about 8-12" apart in the garden. I'd plant deep, and do the usual hilling up routine over time. Also, watch for freezes and be prepared to cover up the plants if cold weather threatens.

    I am not sure about the best timing for potatoes from seed. Normally, we can plant the tubers very early, as you know, because they will be sprouting underground and have protection from cold weather as long as they are under the soil. With seed-raised plants, you probably don't want to put them out until your average last frost date has passed and you feel the weather is going to stay mostly above freezing.

    When the plants grow and you harvest them, only save seeds from plants that produced true-to-type tubers. Rogue out any plants that are producing off-types and inferior plants or tubers. It also is best to always save seeds from the largest number of plants possible to maintain the best qualities of the variety.

    Good luck,

    Dawn

  • bruce_g
    Original Author
    14 years ago
    last modified: 9 years ago

    Thank you.

  • Okiedawn OK Zone 7
    14 years ago
    last modified: 9 years ago

    You're welcome.

  • Sandra Rogers
    8 years ago

    My potatoes produced seed pods also we pulled as many as we could and several had fallen to the ground as we are getting ready for winter and cleaning the vines and weeds it had rained now we potatoes growing everywhere if they make it through winter we should have plenty plus we have tubers put up so all my pods dried out and seeds just fell out so good luck with your seeds

  • Macmex
    8 years ago

    Several times I've grown potatoes from true seed. It's been fun, but so far, I have not been able to get a really good crop from them. To plant for a crop you should start the seed, either about now (which you can't, as it isn't ready) and grow the plants for a few months before letting them dry out and die down. This would produce a good many mini tubers, which you would then store until time to plant your spring potato crop. The other method is to plant in January under lights and transplant the seedlings, several times, each time setting the little plant deeper in the planting medium. This encourages a larger crop.

    I have not managed to harvest many potato seeds. This is mainly because our summers are so extremely hot that the plants abort their seeds. Here's a link in which Tom Wagner, the king of true potato seed, gives advice on growing from true seed.

    George
    Tahlequah, OK


    Tom Wagner on TPS

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