I am so happy for you. I 8:38 love how grateful you are with your harvest every time you pull something out you end up, saying thank God. So awesome to see your abundance and how much you appreciate it. God bless you.
Thank you so much! Growing things beyond greens can be challenging in this shaded garden. Tubers particularly surprises me as you grow them for months unable to peek at all!
Not many people would think to wear purple when they harvest purple yams. You are truly bonding with your garden! Good luck with your Vietnamese tubers. ☮️♥️🙏🏻
OMG! I'm so excited about this. This season I'm going to find this and grow this beautiful vegetable. Wendi Phan is way ahead of the curve. Thank you Wendi for all your content and productions.
Those air potatoes you call are what we plant instead of the tubers. My grandma plants them in a sack mid-year and they are usually ready to be harvested for Christmas here in the PH. I just grabbed a few last time I visited them and will try to plant some for myself. I'm exited!
I grew regular sweet potato in a raised bed and they ended up being bigger than my head lol I didn’t know when to harvest them so they just kept becoming Mondo size and now they come back every year because of how far they spread 😮💨🤣
😆😅🤣wonderful. here in the Philippines, they can grow as much as 5x of the biggest you got. suggest you raise your soil 2 feet up - put up a board or something and fill it in with loam soil amended with the minerals you say you add which is wonderful practice. that will allow the roots to easily penetrate and form and when ready to harvest, you just remove the board you put up and that will expose the harvest without your having to dig. here the practice is to stack 3 used tires and plant a single plant which will grow huge. air potatoes here grow to as big as a fist but the winter will not allow that there...blessings
Great suggestions! If I had room for tires that is great idea. The beauty of living in the tropics where these plants excel. I will have to try that in the tropics. :) How many months does it take for tubers to get 5x the size? Is there a time of year you plant them in the Philippines?
@@wendiland well, the growing season here in the Philippines is, well, the whole year. you can plant during the rains which start end of May but with the climate changing, maybe June, even July. then let it grow until the rains stop around September but there would be intermittent until December, even January. to simplify this, let the plant die back its foliage in the summer heat which start March, April being the hottest month usually but early May can also be really hot. that is when you harvest. if you don't, it will grow back...blessings
@@paulbraga4460 It sounds like this plant doesn't like the extreme heat? Does the tuber not rot planting before the rainy season? Thank you for the tips! I think Vietnam should have very similar weather to the Philippines.
@@wendiland climate, not weather which is your day to day things. climate is the repeating pattern of like in the Philippines we have 2 seasons - rainy and summer, versus 4 in the U.S. the tuber will not rot if already established with shoots all around. the heat affects the plant in that it dies back or better put - stop growing foliage. why some harvest the crop only after 2 years or even more...watch youtube videos from the Philippines - google "paano magtanim ng ube" and you will see how they cut up the tuber into pieces which as long as there is enough skin on them will grow shoots....blessings
We have a small lot as well and every inch is accounted for by plants/yard. Our garden we're trying a new raised bed for our sweet potatoes this year, something I saw a guy in Vietnam do. Last years in the ground didn't do well at all. Ube experience wasn't good either. Those monster ones you pulled out, wow. Meals for weeks. ha.
Good Morning Omg it's UWI in my place ( white colour not purple ). It's nice . Kaget juga ditanam dikebun , sudah jarang ditemukan apalagi ini unggu. Awesome , how long time grow ? Ube purple , yeay Thank you for sharing
Awesome harvest!!! I love ube!! Thank you for this vid. Non related ..i was wondering if you can help me out. So I have raised beds and im growing for food - right now I have collard greens, peppers eggplant and just planted beans, tomatoes, strawberries… however recently i see a bunch of poop on the bed… might be opossum or racoon. I remove them when I see them but im wondering if and how long do I have to wait to harvest my crops? The other day I forgot to remove them and then all day it rained hard so most of the poop is just mixed in the soil…. Im unsure what is safe? Sorry for the long comment!
Wendi, is there a reason you grow these ube UP a trellis instead of letting them sprawl? It’s a sweet potato! Everywhere the stem touches the ground, there’s a high probability you’d get more full size sweet potatoes! The first year I grew sweets, i grew 5 slips in a 4’x8’ bed. They vined out everywhere and went into the grass. I got 152 POUNDS of sweet potatoes from those five slips.
There's lack of sun and space here. Only place they can sprawl is the walkway and there's no sun. These are not sweet potatoes. It's so confusing when the market keeps calling SP "ube". Here's a video that explains it: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-kgVv-Gzo5jc.html 152 LBS!! That's amazing!!!
@@wendiland So, years ago, I watched one of your bitter melon videos and decided to start growing some. I used to live in Japan and wanted to try to make my own vegan version of Goya Chanpuru. I’ve been growing it EVERY YEAR since I saw your video! THANK YOU! ❤️😋❤️
I have a sweet potato question for you. I'm growing Okinawan sweet potatos that are white on the outside and purple on the inside, but none of mine have EVEEEERRRRrrrrrr turned purple on the inside. What could cause that?
Ube is considered to be a survival crop here in the US and I'd have to agree after eating it several times but not so in the Philippines or to Filipinos. My sister-in-law uses it in her baking and other Filipino friends make other sweet desserts with it. They're both very happy when I give them large head-sized roots that I grew in grow bags. I've left a couple in the bags over two years (I'm in south Florida). I had to stop growing them because they are so aggressive growers, dare I say, invasive and they grow all over my other vegetables, weighing them down and killing them. Aside from the beautiful purple color it provides, I'm not a big fan.
There’s always a flip side to things…they don’t grow as vigorous here…if you make a dedicated bed for them, will the roots trail and come up elsewhere?
@@wendiland LOL a "flip" side to things, huh?. I don't know about the roots. I don't have much space in my yard, and I never valued Ube enough to dedicate an entire bed to them. I do know the vines would quickly outgrow the bed and sprawl all over the place until it reaches something it can wrap around and climb, like a fence, trellis, or tree.
@@user-su5du9ln8r I recently planted some directly under a trellis, which is near a tree. So, they're climbing up the trellis, then following a rope to the tree. They don't like to grow horizontally, so it takes a little encouragement. Once they hit the tree, look out! Combining all the comments advice here, it looks like the perfect thing would be a deep raised bed directly under a tree, maybe a few ropes going up into the tree. This gives you the chance to grow an annual plant that's fifty feet tall! Now, give them the right fertilizer and attention to the water supply, this should be about all you can DO, if you don't have a chance to actually move to the Philippines.
@wendiland oh nice, im Aaron from san jose,ca,. If you like i could give you my email would you like to chat sometime but if your too busy i understand.?