You can grow an enormous crop of potatoes without any of the backbreaking effort of digging. Just follow the steps below.
There is no need for fork or spade in any way, shape or form. This is ideal for those who have problems bending and lifting heavy loads. It is also a good project for a school or aged home gardening project.
Mark out an area of lawn,
1. Lay down some weed suppressing material like carpet underlay, cardboard or thick layers of newspapers.
2. On this put a layer of compost and/or earth.
3. Put seed potatoes, or pieces of potato with eyes directly onto this layer of compost, exactly where you want them to grow
4. Cover this with a fairly generous layer of mulch or hay/straw, roughly 30 cm (1ft) deep.
5. Water this in well. Green plant shoots will come through this layer of material.
6. Add mulch as required to cover any tubers, which may grow on the surface of the mulch.
7. Water and treat pests and diseases regularly as required
8. With this method you can pull back part of the mulch to access some of the small potatoes for early use.
9. When the Haulms (Plants) have died back, you can pull back the remaining mulch to find a big crop of clean big potatoes. Which probably won’t even need to be cleaned.
10. Next growing season, lay the seed potatoes directly onto the broken down layer of mulch to start again.
This method of growing potatoes requires little effort, on the part of the gardener. You are able to grow potatoes anywhere from the lawn to a rooftop to a driveway.
It also helps teach youngsters about where and how some of the produce actually comes from and grow, rather than it simply coming from a greengrocer. So why not get out there today, and grow your own potatoes.
- Related Videos
- Related Articles
- Ask / Related Q&A




What's the best nutrient solution for you
By: Daniel Butler | 27/11/2009Hydroponics is big business all over the world and consequently many excellent feeds are available, and like plants everybody has their favourites.
Los Angeles Hydroponics Information
By: Iris Caesar | 26/11/2009http://www.bcnorthernlights.com BC Northern Lights' line of LED grow lights are perfect for Los Angeles hydroponics.
Pros of misting systems
By: John Smith | 26/11/2009A misting system will cool down the temperatures wherever you install it. They are a blessing during those summer days when it is highly impossible to be comfortable with ourselves.
How to Grow and Maintain Asparagus
By: Cris Ramasasa | 26/11/2009Asparagus is an annual and a sun loving crop that's a delicacy in the kitchen. It's a hardy plant and well adapted when planted in early spring. It grows well in 6.0-6.8 soil pH level and tolerant to salinity.
Growing Medicinal Herbs FAQ
By: Vicky Josephino | 26/11/2009Wouldn’t it be nice to just pick out remedies from your everyday aches and pains? With therapeutic herbs in your garden, it’s a likely possibility. Read this article to find out the best ways on how to grow medicinal herbs.
The Gardener’s Friend – The Gardening Waste Bin
By: Richard n Williams | 26/11/2009Any good gardener knows the importance of a good gardening bin. It seems it doesn’t matter whether we are weeding, mowing, planting or seeding the garden is a key place for generating waste.
Basic Information And Instruction With Indoor Herb Gardening
By: Marie Davis | 26/11/2009Indoor herb gardening is a hobby that more and more people are taking an interest in. It's so simple that many are growing herbs plants on their windowsills! Of course, the right lighting, moisture, and temperature is needed in order for them to grow, so it's essential that you have the right knowledge before you attempt to grow herbs in your home.
What Type Is The Right Indoor Grow Lighting Your Garden Need?
By: Marie Davis | 26/11/2009One of the most important things you need to consider if you have plants in your home is lighting. The right type of indoor grow lighting is needed in order for your plants to grow properly. If the settings aren't just right, the plants won't grow as they should.
Free Urea Based Fertilizer
By: Bare Bones Gardener | 21/10/2007 | GardeningHuman urine makes an excellent high nitrogen liquid fertiliser for most plants. Dilute it 10 to 1 and pour it over and or round fast growing plants once a week; like vegetables, Green manure crops and sugar cane. Indeed just about anything that you want to push along rapid green growth
No Dig Potatoes
By: Bare Bones Gardener | 19/10/2007 | GardeningYou can grow an enormous crop of potatoes without any of the backbreaking effort of digging. Just follow the steps below.
Mulch and Feed your Gardens for Free
By: Bare Bones Gardener | 17/10/2007 | GardeningIn Today's throwaway society, there is absolutely no need to go out and purchase mulch material for your garden, unless it is for the particular aesthetic appearance, "The Look", sake of the mulch material.
Protect your Seedlings From Animals and Birds
By: Bare Bones Gardener | 17/10/2007 | GardeningNo matter how much people try to encourage the wildlife to visit and live in their gardens. There will always be occasions and/or parts of the garden where we do not welcome them. This being mainly when we are planting young seedlings or a crop of edible plants is getting close to harvest. So we have to strike a balance between encouraging the wildlife as well as being able to discourage them at other times or from certain particular places.
Plant Disease - “garden Creep”
By: Bare Bones Gardener | 17/10/2007 | GardeningOne thing you either might have to watch out for or embrace is something I call Garden Creep. This is the ability of certain gardens, let alone the plants in them, of slowly growing and spreading or even multiplying over time.
Snappy Cuttings
By: Bare Bones Gardener | 17/10/2007 | GardeningHow many of you have admired some amazing displays of Snapdragons (Antirrhinums), and wished that you could keep those plants going indefinitely. While they haven't managed to get those bright displays into a perennial form of the same standard, yet. There are some things you can do right now.
Perfumed Aussie Native Garden Plants
By: Bare Bones Gardener | 17/10/2007 | GardeningThere is a strong belief among many people, that Australian Natives are beautiful but have no perfume. A stroll through the bush will dispel that rumour easily. The fragrance of crushed leaves and scented blossoms can be almost overpowering at times. But many of the natives have a more subtle fragrance; you have to be close to them at the correct time to appreciate the flavours and scents.