Ease of
Raising:
|
5/5 - Very easy
|
Water:
|
2-4/5 – Twice a week to daily
|
Sun:
|
4/5 - Full sun, will tolerate shade
|
Training:
|
1/5 – None, except for unwanted runners
|
Fertilise/Feeding:
|
3/5 – Moderate (monthly)
|
Time to
Harvest:
|
4/5 – Moderate (3-4 months as leaves die,
but well worth the wait)
|
Frost
Hardiness:
|
4/4 – Very tender
(can’t take light frost)
|
Uses
|
Culinary
|
Most
Problematic Nemesis:
|
Nothing too serious
|
Container
Plant:
|
No – produces tubers away from main base
|
Ipomoea purga Köhler's Medizinal-Pflanzen in naturgetreuen Abbildungen mit kurz erläuterndem Texte 1887) Kurt Stubers Online Library |
Quick
intro
There isn’t much mention of sweet potatoes
in most gardening books, yet it is extremely easy to grow and the harvest is
bountiful. These tubers can be eaten baked, boiled or candied – even alcohol
can be made from sweet potatoes. Young shoots and leaves are sometimes eaten as
greens or given to livestock. Given enough space, sweet potatoes grow
vigorously and produce a lot of tubers, but they may take over the garden if
not kept in check!
History
It is generally assumed that the sweet
potato has its origins in tropical America, specifically from wild Mexican Ipomoea trifida. It may have been cultivated
since 8000BC in Mexico, Central and South America, and the West Indies. Columbus
returned from his first voyage to the New World to Spain with the sweet potato.
Thereafter the Spaniards and Portuguese transported it to Asia and Africa, and
by some way it was transported to Polynesia and New Zealand as well. Lately, it
is an important root crop in Asia and Africa, but is also cultivated in the
Americas and Europe.
Science
Stuff
The Sweet Potato, Ipomoea batatas, belongs to the Convolvulaceae (the morning glory
family) and is often confused with yams (Dioscorea
spp.) and is not a true potato (Solanum
tuberosum). There are ornamental varieties, which are called tuberous
morning glories, which to my mind it a better definition for the root crop.
The Golden Morning Glory Aniseia aurea |
There are different varieties of sweet
potato, elongated to globular, white, tan, yellow, red, purple skinned and ones
with white, yellow or orange flesh.
Ipomoea
trifida, and some other wild sweet potato varieties
are still bred into the domesticated lineage, as these varieties have high
genetic diversity and their tubers contain more starch.
Growing
Sweet Potatoes
So the one big thing I read on sweet
potatoes is that it does not tolerate frost, considering that it is a
subtropical to tropical crop. Therefore it should be grown in regions with five
months (or more) worth of growing season. Cold tolerant cultivars have been
introduced to the UK, but it still requires the protection and added heat from
tunnels, frames or green houses to crop reliably.
Sweet Potato Flower Ipomoea batatas |
It prefers temperature above 24oC
(75oF), but will tolerate temperature as low as 15oC. It likes lots
of sun and warm nights. Apparently it likes a lot of water and is sensitive to
drought, although mine did not have the slightest problem with this – the tomatoes
are more thirsty that the sweet potato! Water-logging may cause the tubers to
rot, but there is no such threat in SA J
It will appreciate some compost and produce
larger crops, but it can cope with poor soils and many farming conditions. The
sweet potato requires little weeding, as it is a weed itself, excluding all
other weeds (although mine was able to co-habituate with some miss-placed
potato plants). Make sure that the soil is loosened up to 25cm for tubers to
form properly.
Other sweet potato tips
Make sure to keep an eye on its trailing
nature as it will creep into everything and needs to be restricted if grown
amongst other vegetables, else you can plop it somewhere in the garden and let
it carry on.
Sweet Potato Plant Ipomoea batatas |
The plant does not have problematic pests or
diseases, I had a few caterpillars feeding on its foliage, but luckily my wasp
army made off with the invasion soon enough J.
Harvesting
and Storing
Sweet potatoes are harvested once the
leaves start to yellow, usually 4-5 months after planting. Leaving the tubers
in the soil after the plant has died ensures that the starch content increases
and the tubers become sweeter, but the tubers must be harvested before the first
frost.
Sweet Potato Tubers (White) Ipomoea batatas |
Sweet potatoes need proper curing to become
sweet and moist. This can be done by storing them in a warm (26oC,
80oF) and humid room with good ventilation for 5-10 days. Afterwards
the sweet potatoes can be stored at 12-15oC (55-60oF). To
low temperature causes root to harden, whereas to high and dry conditions cause
roots to shrivel. So I suggest storing them in a paper bag to level out the
conditions a bit more. Properly cured sweet potatoes can keep for up to 12
months, just check them regularly for any signs of disease or rot.
Propagation
Sweet potatoes do best when grown
vegetatively- that being cuttings or ‘slips’. Cuttings of sweet potato vine
root easily and rapidly in water. Slips are similar to potato ‘eyes’; half of
the tuber can be placed into a cup of water and left in the water until the
tuber produces shoots, after which it can be planted into the garden.
I suppose you can get sweet potato
plants/cuttings and a nursery, but no such luck here. I let some store-bought
sweet potatoes produce slips and planted them in the garden.
As with the potatoes, keep some smaller
tubers to produce slips in the next season.
My
Sweet Potatoes
So, again, as with the potato – I don’t
have a ‘formal’ sweet potato cultivar. I have made slips from white and orange
flesh varieties. You will notice that some of your sweet potatoes will grow
slower than the others (and they’ll have leaves that curl inwards), these are
poor stock and their smaller tubers should rather not be kept as slips for the
next season.
Sweet Potato Vine Ipomoea batatas |
A morning glory with identity crisis!
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