Table of Contents
Potato Station (Grow Bag Area)
This page documents the dedicated Potato Station beside the shed using fabric grow bags on pallets. Goal: Easy potato harvest with no digging, clean workflow, and reusable soil.
1. Location & Hardware
Location:
- Along the side of the shed, on level ground
- Full sun or at least 6β8 hours of sun
Platform:
- One or more wood or plastic pallets
- Optional: pallet set on cinder blocks for extra height + airflow
- Under the pallet: landscape fabric to stop weeds growing up through the slats
Containers:
- Gardzen 15-gallon grow bags (fabric, with handles)
- Planned usage: 3β4 bags for potatoes (extras can be used for peppers, herbs, etc.)
Why pallets?
- Keeps bag bottoms from staying soggy
- Allows airflow under bags β less rot, cooler soil
- Prevents roots and Bermuda grass from growing up into the bags
- Makes harvest easier (bags donβt sink into the ground)
2. Soil Mix & Bag Setup
Each 15-gallon bag β 2 cubic feet of soil.
2.1 Base Soil Mix (per bag)
Target mix for loose, well-drained potato soil:
- 40% topsoil (Scotts or similar)
- 40% raised bed / garden mix
- e.g., Miracle-Gro Raised Bed Mix, Sta-Green, or similar
- 20% Black Kow cow manure
Optional amendments per bag:
- 1β2 cups bone meal (phosphorus for tubers)
- 1 cup all-purpose organic fertilizer (4-4-4 or 5-5-5)
- A small scoop of perlite if extra drainage is needed
Rule: Soil should feel light and fluffy, not heavy or sticky.
2.2 Filling Sequence
For each grow bag:
- Fill bottom ~6 in (15 cm) with the soil mix.
- Moisten lightly (damp, not soggy).
- Place 3 seed potatoes evenly spaced on the surface
- (4 if they are small.)
3. Planting & Hilling Process
Zone: Sanford, NC (warm climate with mild winters). Main timing:
- Spring crop: Plant seed potatoes late Feb β mid March
- Optional fall crop: Plant again late Aug β early Sept
3.1 Initial Planting
- Lay 3 seed potatoes on the first 6β soil layer.
- Cover with 4β5 in of soil mix.
- Label the bag with:
- Variety
- Planting date
3.2 Hilling in Grow Bags
As plants grow:
- When foliage reaches 6β8 in tall, add 3β4 in of soil around stems (do not bury all the leaves).
- Repeat the hill-and-fill process every time the plants grow another 6β8 in, until:
- Soil is within 2β3 in of the top of the bag.
Goal: Create a tall column of covered stem where new tubers can form.
4. Watering & Feeding
4.1 Watering
- Check moisture daily in hot weather.
- Potatoes like even moisture, not soaking:
- Water thoroughly until water drains from the bottom.
- Let the top ~1 in dry slightly between waterings.
- Fabric bags dry out faster than in-ground beds β better drainage, but more frequent watering.
4.2 Feeding Schedule
At planting (mixed into soil):
- Black Kow + all-purpose organic fertilizer.
Side-dressing:
- About 4 weeks after planting, add:
- 1 small handful of organic fertilizer around each plant, lightly worked into the top layer.
- Avoid very high-nitrogen fertilizers once plants are growing strongly (too much leaf, fewer potatoes).
5. Harvest Workflow
One of the big reasons for the Potato Station: super easy harvest.
5.1 Signs Potatoes Are Ready
- Foliage has yellowed and died back for 2+ weeks
- Soil is dry and bag feels lighter
5.2 Harvest Steps (No Digging)
- Lay a tarp on the ground in front of the pallet.
- Lift one grow bag off the pallet and place it on its side over the tarp.
- Grab the handles and dump the bag so all soil falls onto the tarp.
- Gently break apart the soil and collect all potatoes.
- Sort:
- Keepers (good size, no damage)
- Small βseedβ potatoes for replanting
- Brush off excess soil; cure/stage for storage as needed.
Result:
- No shovels, no digging, no cutting potatoes in half by accident.
6. Soil Reuse & Reset Between Crops
Grow-bag soil can be reused if refreshed properly.
After each harvest:
- Remove old roots and plant debris from the dumped soil.
- For each bagβs worth of soil, mix in:
- 1β2 shovels Black Kow
- 1 cup organic fertilizer (4-4-4 / 5-5-5)
- Check texture:
- If soil feels heavy/compacted β add a little fresh raised bed mix + perlite.
- Pour refreshed soil back into the grow bag, ready for the next planting.
Note: If potatoes ever get a serious disease (blight, rot, etc.), retire that soil from potatoes and use it for non-solanaceae plants (flowers, herbs, etc.).
7. Maintenance & Notes
- Keep weeds down under/around pallets with landscape fabric + mulch.
- Rotate varieties between bags each season if possible.
- Check bag condition each year; replace torn/worn bags as needed.
- Good use for extra bags:
- Peppers
- Bush beans
- Herbs
- Extra Independence Day tomatoes
7.1 Quick Checklist
- [ ] Pallet in place, fabric under pallet
- [ ] 3β4 x 15-gal grow bags labeled
- [ ] Soil mix prepared (topsoil + raised bed mix + Black Kow)
- [ ] Seed potatoes on hand
- [ ] Tarp stored nearby for harvest
- [ ] Notes updated with planting and harvest dates
8. Varieties to Try (Ideas)
- Early: βRed Pontiacβ, βYukon Goldβ
- Main: βKennebecβ, βRussetβ type
- Fun/colored: βAll Blueβ or other specialty types
(Record actual varieties grown each year below.)
8.1 Year-by-Year Log
- 2026:
- Varieties:
- Planting date(s):
- Harvest date(s):
- Yield & notes:
