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Russet Potatos Are they grown in Thailand
#1
Posted 2010-07-28 22:00
#2
Posted 2010-07-28 22:23
#3
Posted 2010-07-28 22:29
#4
Posted 2010-08-01 13:48
I've looked for and yet to see anything resembling a Russet, with its medium brown skin exterior. If some market is stocking them here, I'd love to know where.
#5
Posted 2010-08-01 14:20
If not, I'll just have to put out some tea money to a factory manager.
#6
Posted 2010-08-01 14:25
looks like a bag you would buy at most US stores.
rice555
#7
Posted 2010-08-01 14:59
#8
Posted 2010-08-01 18:13
Thanks much for all of the guys info.
#9
Posted 2010-08-01 19:55
don't come down that much any more. I do find that sometimes
Villa has things, then for months they don't. Is their a contact
person in the store to ask about wanted products, like masa harina?
rice555
#10
Posted 2010-08-01 20:05
But you're absolutely right... With Villa, sometimes things are in.... then for long periods they're out...
It's always a bit of a C**P Shoot....
#11
Posted 2010-08-03 19:01
Here in Mae Sot, Tak province a lot of Potatoes are grown,
although the ones I've seen are the white thin skinned ones.
I have river bottom sandy soil perfectly suited to growing them,
and of course year round full sprinkler irrigation.
The Hmong farmers rented land from Thai farm owners last dry season,
and grew potatoes on the clay rolling hills
They were very pleased with their harvest, and definitely want to return next season.
I observed that with 3 times more fertilizer and twice the water,
they'd have harvested probably 4X the potato.
Anyone want to do a joint project?
I grow the crops, and you market them in the major city centers?
Not limited to Potatoes, but that's the topic of this thread.
Years ago my father leased his alfalfa ground in Nevada high desert
to Potato growers from Bakersfield CA.
They grew an extremely heavy crop, 43 tons per acre, one year only, as it was the alfalfa rotation year.
They were all grown for potato chip, and were Kennebec variety.
Russet is a baking potato.
A recommended furrow method that I'm using for pumpkin right now,
Run a furrow plow as deep as possible,
then pull three rows into one big ridge.
banding fertilizer and limestone dust into the middle furrow,
at two different depths
as you pull the outside two rows over onto it.
Plant the Potato into the sides of the large ridge,
letting them reach downward to the fertilizer from both sides.
Potato require a lot of fertilizer and water, as mentioned above,
but the yield will also be very dramatic.
#12
Posted 2010-08-03 19:09
Thanks so much for the good work and words. I am retired and not in shape to market potatoes here in LOS, but would certainly buy many for home use. If you decide to try growing, let me know and I will buy 25 lbs at a time if they keep ok.
Thanks again, much appreciate everybodys comments.
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