Growing potatoes using the Hilling Method - Our Stoney Acres (2024)

Growing potatoes using the Hilling method often produces the largest crops of potatoes. It is more space intensive but produces a large crop of big, healthy “taters”.

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Homegrown potatoes are the best!!

Why? There are several reasons you should be growing potatoes in your garden:

First, like most veggies, the homegrown version of potatoes just taste better!!

Second, having grown up in Southern Idaho and working for a potato farmer I know what they do to commercially grown potatoes. The fields are drenched in fungicides, herbicides, pesticides, and fertilizers. Then after harvest, they are treated again with chemicals to keep them from sprouting and for longer storage. Commercially grown potatoes are almost literally dripping with chemicals!

Third, did you know there are over 100 varieties of potatoes that you can grow, but all the potatoes you can get in the grocery store are limited to about 5 varieties? If you only buy your potatoes at the grocery store you are missing out on tons of other tasty options.

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Hopefully I have you sold on the idea of growing potatoes, now let’s talk about how I grow mine. There are several different methods for growing potatoes. Containers, towers, straw mulch, etc., I have tried them all over the years. But the method I have landed on as being the most successful for our garden is the hilling method. It takes a little bit more work and planning but overall has been a very successful method for growing potatoes for us. So let’s break it down for you.

Growing potatoes – Types of potatoes

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The first thing you need to do is choose the type of potato to grow. There are several different types of potatoes, do some homework before you choose the types you plant. We love red potatoes and usually, about 80% of what we grow is the variety, Red Pontiac. Red potatoes are creamy and delicious and are perfect for mashed potatoes and casseroles, but in my opinion, are not nearly as good baked. So we always grow some type of russet potato, as well as these, are better suited for baking.

There are purple, blue, white, red, pink, cream and brown-skinned potatoes. Fingerling potatoes are small longer potatoes thatare great roasted, but they are small so they would be a nightmare to peel for other uses. Spend some time on the Internet learning about all the different types of potatoes before you decide on what you want to try. Then look locally at your garden stores before you order online. Often ordering potatoes on-line or from a catalog can be very pricey so it’s always better to find them locally to avoid shipping costs if you can.

Planting times

Most potatoes need between 90 to 120 days to mature. So be sure you know what you are planting before you get started. I plant my potatoes twice during the year. Once early in the spring (around March 15th) under the protection of a cold frame or hoop house. These potatoes are meant mainly to be “early” potatoes for us to eat with our peas as Cream Peas and Potatoes. To learn more about this method check out my post on Growing Early Potatoes.

My second planting of potatoes comes between May 15th and June 1st. This planting is meant to be our main crop of potatoes and the planting is timed so that the growing potatoes are fully mature and ready to harvest in Mid September.

Chitting your potatoes

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Potatoes will come up a lot faster after planting if you plant the seed that has been chitted first. Chitting (or sprouting) is simply allowing your potatoes to grow small sprouts from the eyes before you plant them. Simply place them in a warm spot for a week or two before planting and let those sprouts grow. BUT, you want to be sure you get them in the ground before the sprouts are much longer than one or two inches. If you allow the sprouts to grow longer than that you risk them breaking off when planted and the plants will produce an inferior crop.

Cutting Potato Seed

Seed potatoes come in all different sizes. The smaller ones (those around golf ball sized or slightly bigger) will just get planted whole. But I like to cut up the larger potatoes. Just use a sharp knife and cut the potato into two or even 3 pieces. The key is to be sure that there are at least 3 eyes in each piece.

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There is some debate about weather cutting seed potatoes encourages disease problems. In my experience I have found no problems with a disease on cut seed vs. uncut. If you live in an area with many prevalent potato diseases then you might want to consider not cutting your seed, but for us, it is not an issue.

Planting for the Hill Method

To get the potato seed planted I simply dig a 4 to 6 inch deep trench. In the bottom of this trench I add an inch of compost and mix it in with the soil at the bottom. I then plant the seed potato with the cut end down, the eyes facing upward. If you are planting a seed potato that hasn’t been cut then you should put the portion of the potato with the most eye’s facing up. For main crop potatoes, I like to space the seed about every 12 inches. If I’m only looking to get small early potatoes then I may plant as close as 6 inches.

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Then I cover the potatoes with about 1 to 2 inches of soil but I do not completely fill in the trench at this time!

Hilling the potatoes

So first off why do I hill my potatoes? Potatoes are actually a swollen portion of the stem of the potato plant, not part of the root. So the more under ground stem a potato plant has the more potatoes it will grow.

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So here’s the idea, as soon as you see the first green leaves come up from the emerging potato plant you cover it up again.

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Then as the plant grows out of the soil again you cover it again.

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Once the trench is filled back up I then take soil from the surrounding area and mound or “hill” around the potato plants.

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I do this every week for 2 or 3 more times. By the time I’m finished the hills will be around 12 to 15 inches high. Then I let them grow!

Harvesting Potatoes

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These pretty pink or white flowers on the potato plants indicated that tuber formation is starting. Once I see the flowers I know there are potatoes in the ground and I make sure to keep soil mounded up and all the growing potatoes covered.

An uncovered potato exposed to the sunlight will turn green. A green potato is actually mildly poisonous so be sure not to feed green potatoes or skins to your chickens or other small animals. But it is easy to prevent green potatoes by simply checking your plants once a week to be sure there are no potatoes that have risen to the surface.

If you would like some small early potatoes wait a week or two after you see the first flowers on your spuds and then carefully dig around the plant with your hand and steal a few small potatoes leaving the rest to fully mature.

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You know the time to harvest your mature potatoes has come when the green “tops” of the plants die back. The foliage will turn mostly brown or yellow. I try to keep my potatoes in the ground for as long as I can in the fall. I figure the longer they are in the ground the less time I have to store them inside. But you do need to be careful get them out of the ground before the new potatoes start sprouting and trying grow new plants. Also be careful not to leave mature potatoes in wet soil as they can often rot! A good practice is once the tops have mostly died back start digging a plant up every few days to see what condition the potatoes are in.

One author I read suggested cutting all the foliage off once it has turned yellow, watering and then waiting 10 days to harvest the potatoes. This gives the growing potatoes a chance to harden a bit before you dig them up. That is basically what I do, other than I usually don’t bother actually cutting the tops away.

To harvest simply use a digging fork to gently lift the growing potatoes from the soil. Be careful to start digging quite a ways back from the plant so that you don’t skewer a potato with your digging fork or shovel.

Storing potatoes

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After harvesting my potatoes I like to bring them into our garage and carefully spread them out on a table for a few days to allow the dirt on them to dry. I then very gently brush off any remaining dirt by simply rolling the potatoes in my hand. I then let them sit in the dark garage for a few more days to allow the skins to “harden” for long term storage. Be sure that you do not leave the potatoes outside in the sun to harden. Sunlight (or any light for that matter) will cause your potatoes to go green. The only way to prevent this is to keep them out of the light (even the artificial light of your garage)

After hardening (some times up to 10 days) I usually sort my potatoes by size, small medium and large. While I’m doing that I look carefully at each potato looking for any damage or “bad” spots on the potatoes. Any potatoes that are sub par go right into the fridge to be used up right way. All the good potatoes get stored by size in an airy crate or basket. The small potatoes are used for roasts, stews and other recipes where the potatoes don’t need to be peeled. We try to use these up fairly quickly as the longer they store the tougher the skins get and peeling a little potato is a pain in the neck!! The medium sized potatoes are used for mashed potatoes and in casseroles. We save the big potatoes for baking and for homemade French fries!!

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Air flow is important to prevent mold or rot. Keep your potatoes in a cool dark spot. Of course, a fridge is ideal but if you are like us you just don’t have room for 250 pounds of potatoes in your fridge. So try a cool spot in your basem*nt or garage. Be sure to keep them out of the light by covering them with a heavy fabric like burlap.

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Optimum conditions for potato storage would be a nice dark root cellar where the temperature stays between 40 and 45 degrees (but always above freezing). Most of us don’t have that option but try to come as close as you can. Think about cool spots in the garage. Or maybe you could even create a mini root cellar in an out of the way window well.

Under those perfect conditions, potatoes could last all winter, but more likely they will store around 3 or 4 months. For us, that means once most of the fresh produce is gone from the garden in the late fall we get busy eating potatoes. We are sure to check every time we get potatoes and take any that may be going bad or sprouting first. With a little bit of management we are usually finishing up the last of our potatoes around the end of March each year.

For a little more info on growing potatoes and the storage of potatoes check out these posts:

Growing an early crop of potatoes

Storing potatoes all Winter Long

Curing potatoes for winter storage

Window Well Root Cellars

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Growing potatoes using the Hilling Method - Our Stoney Acres (2024)

FAQs

Does hilling potatoes make a difference? ›

Reasons for hilling may include: improved weed control, improved drainage, minimization of greening of tubers, and raising of soil temperatures.

How many times should you hill potatoes? ›

You can hill your potatoes 1-3 times per season/crop.

Do you cover leaves when hilling potatoes? ›

Hilling brings loose soil around the vines where the potatoes will form as well as deepening the roots into cooler soil. With the first hilling, I like to cover the vines up so that only the top leaves are exposed.

How long do I Hill potatoes? ›

Start hilling (pulling soil up over the potato plants in a ridge) when the plants are 6” (15 cm) tall. Hill again two or three weeks later and two more weeks after that, if the plant canopy has not already closed over, making access impossible.

When should you stop hilling potatoes? ›

Make sure you hill the potatoes plants before they bloom. Make sure the potatoes are sufficiently hilled before flowering occurs. After flowering is complete and the plants start to die back, any extra hilling will not make a big difference in preventing the potatoes from greening.

Does hilling potatoes increase yield? ›

Reasons for hilling may include: improved weed control, improved drainage, minimization of greening of tubers, and raising of soil tempera tures. Proper management of each of these fac tors may result in an increase in quality and quantity of tuber yield.

How far up do you mound potatoes? ›

Hill the plants when they're about 6-8 inches (15-20cm) high. The purpose of hilling is to cover potato tubers as they start to poke out of the ground.

What potatoes don't need hilling? ›

Determinate potatoes grow to a set height and produce a reliable crop of tubers without the need for covering their developing stem.

What month do you plant potatoes? ›

The best planting time is February. But I think of potatoes as having two seasons here — one is August into early September for a late fall or early winter harvest, and the other is February for a late spring harvest.

What is the best fertilizer for potatoes? ›

Potatoes perform well on an all purpose fertilizer, with lower NPK measurements as compared to a high Nitrogen fertilizer such as a 13-0-0. Potatoes like a balanced fertilizer, such as a 2-3-3.

Can I plant potatoes in the same spot every year? ›

As far as crop rotation, potatoes are in the nightshade family with tomatoes and peppers and share the same diseases and pests. If you plant the same family in the same spot year after year, you're increasing the chances of a catastrophic season.

What's the secret to growing potatoes? ›

Potatoes like slightly acidic soil (5.8-6.5 pH). Add fertilizer or composted manure for best results. If you want to make the task of weeding easier (and you have the space), plant your potatoes at least two feet apart so that you can weed around them easily.

What happens if potatoes don't flower? ›

Potatoes - Flowering & Watering 🥔 Potato plants don't need to flower to produce tubers, so don't worry if your potato plants are not producing flowers.

Can potatoes get too much sun? ›

Potatoes are sun-lovers and generally thrive with ample sunlight. However, too much direct sun can lead to issues like leaf scorch. On the flip side, insufficient light can result in spindly plants and poor tuber development. It's all about finding that sweet spot.

Do all potatoes need hilling? ›

If the potato tubers come in contact with sunlight they can become green and not fit to eat. In fact, green potatoes can carry toxins and could become poisonous. To prevent this, potatoes should be hilled at least a couple times during their growth cycle.

Do you water potatoes after hilling? ›

Usually around the time my potato plants are flowering, I've hilled them as much as I can. At this time, I mulch them heavily with hay or straw and continue to make sure they receive 1 inch of water per week until close to harvest time.

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