Well done. Nice true honest video and not fake. Nice harvest. Really good yield. Looks yummy. We have a sweet potatoe (kumara [NZ]) garden at home (GI, Auckland) every summer with my kids. (Good quality family time even though my kids not so into it sometimes but it's a skill for life and they may have a passion for it when they are older and have kids. Gardening is a great time out and fitness. And great feeling seeing plants grow.) A bit of skills involved planting kumaras and a bit of work when preparing the soil. My knowledge and experience - I learned from my Tongan friends. Once the kumaras are planted, just weed after 6 or 7 weeks when the vines spreading and tidy the mounds by putting the soil back up and leave them. The vines and leaves blocks the weeds from growing. Don't need much water. Water only when planting and water again after 4 or 5 days, and water once a month in the first two months then leave them to grow and matured. They need dry drained soil to grow tubers - stressing the kumaras to produce tubers. But not too dry. Mounds are the best for growing sweet potatoes. It keeps the ground warm and drained. You can put your finger into the mound in the evening after sunset and the soil is still warm. You put your finger into the flat ground and the soil is cooler. Kumaras need warm drained soil to grow tubers. During the day the kumara leaves looks like they are dying of slacking or need water, depending on the sweet potatoe variety. This is normal - don't water it or feel sorry for them. They bounced back up in the evening. And very alive and fresh in the mornings. Only water when the soil is really dry. Harvest after 4-5 months. You can eat the young leaves (cooked) like silverbeet, puha or taro leaves. We plant the kumaras straight on the grounds on mounds. Mounds are 80x80cm or a bit bigger 90×90cm. Planting 3 slips or shoots on each mounds. Takes 4-5 months to harvest - if you're in NZ, plant late October or in November and harvest in late March to early May before winter. Hope that helps. Good luck. Happy gardening. This video is a nice way to plant kumaras in bags when you don't have a lot of space. Excellent results. Excellent video. True video.
@EYGardening HAPPY 2024!!! I HAVE SOME SWEET POTATOES IN THE KITCHEN THAT HAVE VINES GROWING. MOST ARE 6+ INCHES. I HAVE SEVERAL QUESTIONS - 1) SHOULD I PLANT THE WHOLE POTATO OR CUT THE VINES AND PLANT? 2) ARE THE BAGS A SPECIFIC TYPE OR CAN I USE THE BAGS OF ORGANIC SOIL I HAVE AND JUST PUT HOLES ON ONE SIDE? 3) IS THE SOIL REUSABLE AFTER HARVEST? IF NOT WHAT SHOULD BE DONE WITH IT. 4) HOW OFTEN SHOULD I WATER? 5) WHEN SHOULD I BEGIN PLANTING? 6) WHEN DO I HARVEST? 7) DO THE BAGS NEED TO LAY ON THE GROUND OR CAN THEY BE PLACED IN A CONTAINER? 8) ARE THERE ANY MINERALS OR ANYTHING THAT NEEDS TO BE ADDED TO THE SOIL? IF SO, WHAT? AND WHAT INTERVALS? THANK YOU FOR YOUR TIME.
Tôi có làm rồi. Năm đó khoai lang rớt giá tôi đem củ khoai lang cùng đất vô bao .nó lên chòi ra lá.khi khoai lang có giá tôi moi ra ôi toàn là củ. Nếu làm phim thì tuyệt vời.
Question Video Location 0:41 Please, What type of white cloth are you using in your video? What is the tool you are using to make circular holes in the cloth?