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Kennebec Potatoes
Productive and Blight Resistant
 ( 2 customer reviews)
Main. Young tubers are tasty for creaming. Later, good
for boiling, mashing, baking—smooth with shallow
eyes. Stores well. Sorry, we are unable to ship to: AE, AK, GU, HI, ID, MT, PR
.
This item ships at the proper planting time for your region in both spring and fall.
If the current shipping season is closed, your order will ship at the proper time in the next season.
Product Details
Zones: 3 - 9 annual Height: 2-3 feet Spacing: 12 to 15 inches Depth: 3 to 5 inches 30 to 36 inches between rows Spread: 18-24 inches Sun/Shade: full sun Days To Maturity: Main season potato 80-100 days Yield: 100 lbs /100 foot row Fruit: Very thin, smooth white skin, white smooth textured flesh. Oval shaped
| Comments: Whole sets will get off to an earlier start and produce higher yields. Stores well. Resistant to mosaic, late blight, net necrosis. Very dependable top yielder. Grows in any climate. Has very large leaf and vine habit. Fertilize at planting time. Mound soil over row as plants emerge to protect tubers from turning green in sun. Harvest after tops turn yellow. Can be stored at 40-50 degrees F (cooler temps turn starch to sugar and warmer temps may cause them to sprout). Sprinkle a tablespoon of 10-10-10 fertilizer in the space between each potato piece. Do not apply the fertilizer directly to the potatoes as it can burn the tubers. After plants are 8-10 inches tall, use a hoe and pile several inches of soil up around the stems. This is called hilling. This prevents exposure to the sun which causes tubers to become green and inedible. Shipping: View Shipping Schedule Kennebec Potatoes Ships In Both Spring And Fall Unable to ship to: AE AK GU HI ID MT PR
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Customer Reviews Overall Rating: Write an online review and share your thoughts with other customers Sort Reviews: Newest | Oldest | Highest Rating | Lowest Rating  - Tuesday, May 11, 2010 Happy Gardener Reviewed By: Michelle (Peebles, OH) I grew your kennebec potatoes for the first time last summer in hay. When I discovered the largest potatoe I had uncovered was half the size of our dinner plates I decided right then that these were the potatoes for us. they tased great and stored wonerfully.  - Tuesday, December 08, 2009 Best Mashed Potatoes Ever Reviewed By: Vinnie (Morgantown, WV) First time growing potatoes and grew about 200 lbs worth in a 40 foot row. We had potatoes that weighed 3 pounds each. Not the best for baking potatoes but are superior for mashing. Read More Reviews
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Kennebec Potatoes
Productive and Blight Resistant
(2
customer reviews)
Main. Young tubers are tasty for creaming. Later, good
for boiling, mashing, baking—smooth with shallow
eyes. Stores well. Sorry, we are unable to ship to: AE, AK, GU, HI, ID, MT, PR
.
This item ships at the proper planting time for your region in both spring and fall.
If the current shipping season is closed, your order will ship at the proper time in the next season.
|
Product Details
Zones: 3 - 9 annual Height: 2-3 feet Spacing: 12 to 15 inches Depth: 3 to 5 inches 30 to 36 inches between rows Spread: 18-24 inches Sun/Shade: full sun Days To Maturity: Main season potato 80-100 days Yield: 100 lbs /100 foot row Fruit: Very thin, smooth white skin, white smooth textured flesh. Oval shaped
| Comments: Whole sets will get off to an earlier start and produce higher yields. Stores well. Resistant to mosaic, late blight, net necrosis. Very dependable top yielder. Grows in any climate. Has very large leaf and vine habit. Fertilize at planting time. Mound soil over row as plants emerge to protect tubers from turning green in sun. Harvest after tops turn yellow. Can be stored at 40-50 degrees F (cooler temps turn starch to sugar and warmer temps may cause them to sprout). Sprinkle a tablespoon of 10-10-10 fertilizer in the space between each potato piece. Do not apply the fertilizer directly to the potatoes as it can burn the tubers. After plants are 8-10 inches tall, use a hoe and pile several inches of soil up around the stems. This is called hilling. This prevents exposure to the sun which causes tubers to become green and inedible. Shipping: View Shipping Schedule Kennebec Potatoes Ships In Both Spring And Fall Unable to ship to: AE AK GU HI ID MT PR
|
Customer Reviews
Overall Rating:
Write an online review and share your thoughts with other customers
Sort Reviews: Newest |
Oldest |
Highest Rating |
Lowest Rating 
- Tuesday, May 11, 2010
Happy Gardener
Reviewed By:
Michelle (Peebles, OH)
I grew your kennebec potatoes for the first time last summer in hay. When I discovered the largest potatoe I had uncovered was half the size of our dinner plates I decided right then that these were the potatoes for us. they tased great and stored wonerfully.

- Tuesday, December 08, 2009
Best Mashed Potatoes Ever
Reviewed By:
Vinnie (Morgantown, WV)
First time growing potatoes and grew about 200 lbs worth in a 40 foot row. We had potatoes that weighed 3 pounds each. Not the best for baking potatoes but are superior for mashing.
Read More Reviews