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A Mountain Hearth

Tales of Modern Homesteading and Outdoor Adventure

March 2, 2016

Potato Cages

When it comes to food, we are often encouraged to try something new. I like to apply the same idea to growing food. It’s all food related, right? One of my favorite parts of gardening is trying out new ways to grow things and improving my skills as I go along. I got the nifty idea to build some potato cages this week because we are almost out of storage potatoes and the garden is nowhere near ready for planting, and because rodents have been getting to our potatoes the last couple years and reducing yield anyway.  This project seemed simple enough, requiring only fencing, straw, soil and/or compost and potatoes. We have PLENTY of old fencing around (you have no idea), and straw on hand for the chicken coop, so there was definitely no shortage of materials for this project. I got some fingerling seed potatoes and decided to give it a go.

I set the cages up in the back part of the garden next to where we have planted potatoes in the past. I figure we can just til and prep the garden around them. My goal is to harvest these as summer eating potatoes and also plant some storage potatoes in the ground later in the spring.
 
I got one cage all planted with Russian Banana and Red Thumb Fingerling potatoes, and plan to put Ozette potatoes in the other once I get more soil together. It was a very simple layering process. I put cardboard down first to keep out weeds, then some straw in the bottom and pushed up around the sides, then soil, a ring of potatoes around the outside edge, more straw, more soil, more potatoes, and so forth. The idea is that the potato foliage grows out the sides of the cage and the middle fills in with potatoes. I am hoping this is true. Our cats were immediately pro-potato cage, deeming this the perfect cozy spot to curl up, and someone has been napping between them every day since. 
Potato cages, as it turns out, were a great new thing to try!

Filed Under: Garden, Homesteading, Life

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Winkel's Crazy Ideas says

    March 3, 2016 at 7:32 am

    I love the idea! Very interested to see how you get on! Pam in Norway

    Reply
    • LaraColley says

      March 3, 2016 at 4:38 pm

      I will try to give some updates as the growing season progresses!

      Reply
  2. Audrey Kemp says

    July 31, 2018 at 3:08 pm

    How did this work out? I am interested in your harvest.

    Reply
    • Lara Katherine Mountain Colley says

      September 25, 2018 at 10:11 am

      We didn’t get quite the harvest we had hoped for, and the potatoes were very tiny, so haven’t tried this the last couple years. I think it would work well if someone was working with a smaller space though. Best of luck!

      Reply

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Out here in Oregon, I enjoy the rough-hewn life of a modern homesteader and mountain woman, weaving the outdoors into the fabric of daily life. Whether tending this McKenzie River homestead hearth or a campfire in the backcountry, I find great enjoyment in the work of a sustainable life. Gather around as I share my tales of outdoor adventure, conservation, restoration, land stewardship, wildcrafting, handcrafting, growing food, and keeping chickens. It is my hope to share ideas and inspiration, and strengthen connections with the land and wild places. Read More…

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