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'Adirondack Red' Seed Potatoes
Regular price
$7.50
Sale
***Potatoes cannot freeze. We need temperatures to be at least in the 20s to be able to ship. On Monday, Feb. 24th, it is looking like the weather is breaking here in Minnesota after some bitter cold. We intend to begin shipping potatoes that week. If temperatures got very cold again we would pause shipping until it warms up. Place your order and we will ship as we can. Thanks.
Solanum tuberosum
Origin: Cornell University
Improvement status: Cultivar
Seeds per packet: One pound
Life cycle: Perennial, grown as an annual
'Adirondack Red' is a bright red skin potato with beautiful streaked pink-to-red flesh. This early- to mid-season potato gives good yields of mid-size, oblong tubers.
It was bred at Cornell Univeristy by potato breeders Robert Plaisted, Ken Paddock and Walter De Jong. It was released in 2004.
These seed potatoes were grown organically by our friend Jesse at Mythic Farm in Blue Mounds, Wisconsin. They have been tested and certified for all potato disease requirements.
GROWING TIPS: From EFN co-founder Dusty Hinz:
"I like to plant potatoes a foot apart in rows that are three feet apart. I find it preferable to plant whole tubers rather than cutting them, especially for small to medium-sized ones, but I would potentially cut the larger ones for better bang for buck (if I had bought them).
Or, if I grew the potatoes, I would eat all the large ones and only plant small to small-medium sized ones and not cut them. Part of the reason we have selected the potato varieties that we have is that they are on the small to medium side of things and so most tubers will not need to be cut. If you do cut your potatoes before planting, do it 2-3 days before and as many as 4-5 days before, so as to allow them to harden off.
You can plant your seed potatoes two weeks before the last frost if you want, or anytime in the month of May is fine. Best to plant prior to June though (for Northern climates).
I have planted potatoes as much as one foot deep, though the internet in most places tends to recommend 6-8 inches or less. I have found that even at a foot deep it will shoot right up through the soil (particuarly if it is well worked) in no time. Planting this deep may allow you to not need to hill them up as soon, or as much. So sometimes what I have done is plant them one foot deep with the intention of hilling them possibly just once really thoroughly. But hilling 1-3 times during the season is standard practice if you wish. At a smaller scale it might be easier for you to hill multiple times.
If you are cutting your potatoes into relatively smaller pieces I would not recommend planting them as deep. A whole medium-sized tuber is going to have more strenth and can be planted deeper.
When you are hilling you can cover the entire plant with soil so you can no longer see it.
Harvest the tubers maybe about two weeks after the plants have died off. Watch out for heavy rains and water-logged soil that may make them begin to rot a little."