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Crop Guide – Sweet Potatoes

Common Name Sweet potato (or sweetpotato)
Scientific Name Ipomea batata

Uses Edible root crop; stores well; eaten whole, in muffins, mashed, fries, chips, etc. Leaves are also edible, but not typically consumed.

Crop Timeline

  • Seeds: Sweet potatoes are not grown from seeds.
  • Transplants: Obtain slips (bareroot, vegetative cuttings) for planting in late May to early June. Stick slips in loose soil and keep moist for about a week while roots are established.

Planting tips

  • Fertilizer: Incorporate a complete organic fertilizer in the soil 2 weeks before planting
  • Number of plants per square foot: 1 slip per square foot
  • Growing structures: raised beds, in ground, containers
  • Frost protection: None; sweet potatoes should be harvested before first frost.

Harvest

  • 100-120 days after planting
  • Each slip may produce 3-5 sweet potatoes
  • Find where the vine was planted in the soil and carefully dig around the stem
  • Use plastic trowels to loosen the soil trying to avoid damaging potatoes. Use hands to dig once soil is loosened.

Pests 

There are no major pests of concern for sweet potato in the school garden environment. Generally speaking, a good practice for all crops is to use crop rotation from season to season to break the life cycle of insects and soil pathogens.

This crop guide information has been tailored to school garden use, particularly for Plant Hardiness Zone 7. Other resources you find may be different based on efficiencies of larger scale production systems or maximum harvest yield. If you have questions, feel free to contact Doug Vernon or your local Cooperative Extension office.