Best Time to Dig Potatoes

Cindy who grows her garden in Apopka, Florida recently raised a question regarding the best time to dig potatoes:

“Yesterday we discovered that all three of our plants now have produced potatoes. My question is when is the right time for us to dig up our crop? We have noticed that we still have a few babies that have yet to form into larger spuds.”

“We live in Florida and so I know that if we were in the Northern States that we’d be digging our crop up towards the fall. This is like the end of January and so my question would be… when do we dig them up? We have both red and white potatoes.”

Potatoes can be dug up and harvested whenever they reach the size that you wish to use. Some gardeners sneak a few of the small ones to enjoy as baby potatoes. Just keep in mind that the more baby potatoes harvested earlier, means you’ll find fewer full-sized ones to dig up later in the season.

Here in the north the potatoes can be left in the ground until after the potato vines stop growing and begin to die back in late summer or fall. That’s a sure sign that the potatoes have finished growing and are ready to be harvested.

Prior to harvesting keep any tubers that become exposed covered with soil to prevent the sunlight from turning them green, and don’t leave the potatoes in the sun for long after they’ve been dug up from the garden.

After the potatoes have been dup up and harvested brush the soil off, but don’t wash them until you’re ready to use them. Washing can reduce the storage life and encourage mold. Store potatoes in a cool, dark area after harvesting but avoid refrigeration.



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This entry was posted on Sunday, January 29th, 2006 at 7:23 am and is filed under Digging Root Vegetables, Home Gardening Tips & Ideas. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

One Response to “Best Time to Dig Potatoes”

  1. Kimberly J Cody Says:

    I dig potatoes after the vine is all dead. No green is left in it. I lay them out on the lawn on a good dry day and dry the dirt off if they are wet and muddy at all. I then brush the dirt off and put in a heavy duty card board box. I put the white potatoes in one box red in another one etc to seperate them. I keep them in a cool dry place in the winter other wise they will sprout to soon and get soft. If I have any left by planting time I replant them out.

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