Advance your sweet potato growing with detailed variety selection, professional slip production methods, and cultural techniques for maximum yield and quality.
Sarah Green
Horticulturist and garden expert with 15+ years of experience growing vegetables, herbs, and houseplants. Certified Master Gardener.
Intermediate Sweet Potato: Varieties, Slip Production, and Cultural Techniques
Master sweet potato production by understanding variety characteristics, implementing professional slip production methods, and applying cultural techniques that optimize yield, quality, and storage potential.
Advanced Variety Selection
Understanding Variety Categories
Sweet potato varieties are categorized by flesh color and characteristics:
Orange-Fleshed (Most Common):
| Variety | Days | Yield | Storage | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Covington | 100-110 | High | Excellent | Industry standard, 90% of NC crop |
| Beauregard | 90-100 | Very High | Good | Widely adapted, 1987 release |
| Jewel | 100-110 | High | Excellent | Classic copper skin |
| Georgia Jet | 90 | Moderate | Good | Very early, northern adapted |
| Orleans | 105 | High | Good | Smooth skin, stores well |
White/Cream-Fleshed:
| Variety | Days | Yield | Texture | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| O'Henry | 100 | Moderate | Dry | White skin and flesh |
| Sumor | 105 | High | Dry | Tan skin, cream flesh |
| Bonita | 110 | Moderate | Semi-dry | Disease resistant |
Purple-Fleshed:
| Variety | Days | Yield | Features | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Stokes Purple | 120 | Moderate | High anthocyanins | Specialty market |
| Purple | 120 | Lower | Novelty | True purple inside and out |
| Murasaki | 110 | Moderate | White-fleshed, purple skin | Japanese type |
Regional Variety Recommendations
Southern States (Long Season):
- Covington, Beauregard, Orleans
- 120+ frost-free days available
- Can grow longer-season varieties
Northern States (Short Season):
- Georgia Jet, Beauregard
- Look for 90-100 day varieties
- Use season extension techniques
Container/Small Space:
- Bush Porto Rico (compact vines)
- Vardaman (ornamental foliage)
- Georgia Jet (early maturity)
Professional Slip Production
Seed Root Selection
Quality slips begin with quality seed roots:
Ideal Seed Roots:
- Medium size (2-3 inches diameter)
- Disease-free and unblemished
- Stored properly since harvest
- From high-performing plants
- Certified virus-tested when possible
Bedding System
Commercial slip production uses bedding:
Setup:
- Build raised beds 4-6 inches deep
- Fill with sterile sand or soilless mix
- Provide bottom heat (75-80°F optimal)
- Maintain good drainage
Bedding Process:
- Place roots close together, not touching
- Cover with 2-3 inches of media
- Keep moist but not waterlogged
- Maintain 75-85°F temperature
Timing:
- Start 6-8 weeks before planting date
- Each root produces 10-20+ slips
- Multiple harvests possible from one bedding
Slip Harvest and Handling
When to Harvest Slips:
- 6-8 inches tall
- 4-6 well-developed leaves
- Before stems become woody
- Usually 4-6 weeks after bedding
Harvest Methods:
| Method | Technique | Advantages |
|---|---|---|
| Pulling | Gentle twist and pull | Fast, simple |
| Cutting | Cut at soil surface | Root piece stays, resprouts |
| Breaking | Snap at base | Clean separation |
Post-Harvest Handling:
- Place in water immediately
- Root in water 4-7 days before planting
- Or plant directly if soil is warm and moist
- Store rooted slips at 60-65°F if delay needed
Virus-Free Slip Production
Virus accumulation reduces yields over generations:
Problem:
- Sweet potato leaf curl virus (SPLCV)
- Sweet potato feathery mottle virus (SPFMV)
- Yield losses up to 50% in infected plants
- Viruses accumulate in vegetatively propagated crops
Solution - Meristem Culture:
- Tissue culture from growing tips
- Produces virus-free "foundation" stock
- Yields 3x higher than infected material
- Worth the premium for serious growers
Cultural Techniques for Maximum Yield
Soil Management
Pre-Plant Preparation:
-
Soil Testing:
- Test 3-6 months before planting
- Optimal pH: 5.8-6.2
- Adjust with lime if needed
-
Cover Crops:
- Grow winter rye or oats before sweet potatoes
- Add organic matter
- Suppress nematodes (certain varieties)
- Improve soil structure
-
Ridge Formation:
- Form ridges 10-12 inches high
- Space 40-48 inches center to center
- Creates ideal growing environment
- Allows mechanical harvest
Planting Optimization
Transplanting Technique:
| Method | Description | Best For |
|---|---|---|
| Horizontal | Lay slip flat, 2-4 nodes buried | Even-sized roots |
| Vertical | Plant upright, deep | Larger but fewer roots |
| J-set | Bend bottom of slip | Compromise approach |
Planting Depth and Spacing:
- Bury 3-4 nodes minimum
- 12 inches apart in row
- 9-inch spacing increases yield but smaller roots
- 18-inch spacing produces larger roots
Water Management
Irrigation Scheduling:
| Growth Stage | Water Need | Management |
|---|---|---|
| Establishment (0-2 weeks) | High | Keep moist, not waterlogged |
| Vegetative (2-8 weeks) | Moderate | 1 inch per week |
| Storage root bulking (8-14 weeks) | Moderate | Consistent moisture |
| Pre-harvest (2-3 weeks) | Reduced | Allow soil to dry |
Irrigation Systems:
- Drip irrigation increasingly common
- Overhead irrigation acceptable
- Avoid waterlogging
- Reduce irrigation before harvest for better curing
Fertility Management
Base Fertility:
- Sweet potatoes are moderate feeders
- Excessive nitrogen = excessive vines
- Potassium important for root quality
Recommended Program:
| Timing | Application | Rate |
|---|---|---|
| Pre-plant | Based on soil test | Incorporate 2-4 weeks early |
| At planting | Starter solution | 1 cup per plant (optional) |
| Side-dress (4-6 weeks) | Low N, higher K | 30-0-60 lb/acre |
Signs of Nutrient Issues:
| Symptom | Likely Cause | Action |
|---|---|---|
| Pale green leaves | Nitrogen deficiency | Light N application |
| Excessive vines | Too much nitrogen | Reduce/stop N |
| Poor root development | Low potassium | K side-dress |
| Marginal leaf burn | Potassium deficiency | Foliar K application |
Pest Management
Soil-Borne Pests
Wireworms:
- Larvae of click beetles
- Create holes in roots
- Multi-year life cycles
Management:
- Crop rotation (avoid after grass)
- Plowing in fall to expose larvae
- Bait traps with cut potatoes
Flea Beetle/Diabrotica Complex:
- Larvae feed on roots
- Adults feed on foliage
- Most damaging pest complex
Management:
- Crop rotation (essential)
- Clean cultivation
- Resistant varieties when available
Root-Knot Nematodes
Major yield-limiting pest:
Symptoms:
- Galls (swellings) on roots
- Reduced yield
- Cracked and malformed roots
Management:
| Strategy | Effectiveness | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Resistant varieties | High | Covington has moderate resistance |
| Crop rotation | Moderate | 3-4 years with non-hosts |
| Cover crops | Moderate | Certain varieties suppress nematodes |
| Soil fumigation | High | Commercial production |
Virus Management
Prevention Strategies:
- Use certified virus-tested slips
- Control whiteflies (virus vectors)
- Isolate new plantings from old
- Rogue symptomatic plants
- Renew seed stock every 3-4 years
Harvest Optimization
Determining Maturity
Several indicators of readiness:
- Days from planting (variety specific)
- Yellowing/dying leaves
- Root size sampling
- Skin set (doesn't scrape easily)
- Before first frost (critical)
Harvest Timing Factors
| Factor | Consideration |
|---|---|
| Frost forecast | Harvest before killing frost |
| Soil temperature | Below 55°F causes chilling injury |
| Soil moisture | Dry soil is easier for harvest |
| Market timing | Fresh market vs. storage |
| Equipment availability | Plan for labor needs |
Harvest Techniques
Hand Harvest:
- Cut vines 1-2 days before digging
- Use garden fork or spade
- Dig 12-18 inches from plant center
- Lift gently to minimize damage
- Let roots dry briefly in field
Minimizing Damage:
- Handle carefully (critical for storage)
- Avoid dropping or throwing
- Don't harvest when soil is wet
- Inspect for damage before storage
Curing and Storage
Curing Process
Proper curing is essential:
Curing Conditions:
- Temperature: 80-85°F (27-29°C)
- Humidity: 85-90%
- Duration: 5-7 days minimum
- Air circulation: Gentle
Curing Benefits:
- Heals harvest wounds
- Converts starches to sugars
- Develops full flavor
- Forms protective periderm layer
- Extends storage life dramatically
Storage Conditions
After curing, store properly:
| Parameter | Optimal | Acceptable Range |
|---|---|---|
| Temperature | 55-60°F | 50-65°F |
| Humidity | 75-80% | 70-85% |
| Duration | 6-12 months | Varies by variety |
Storage Problems to Avoid:
- Below 50°F: Chilling injury, hard centers
- Above 65°F: Sprouting, weight loss
- Low humidity: Shriveling
- High humidity: Decay
Record Keeping
Track for continuous improvement:
- Variety performance
- Planting and harvest dates
- Yield per row/area
- Storage losses
- Pest and disease observations
- Weather conditions
This data guides better decisions in future seasons.
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