Tags: Heirloom

Growing Practices: No Pesticides No Herbicides No Fungicides No Synthetic Fertilizers

Latin Name: Solanum tuberosum

Days to Maturity: 110

Description:

Papa Cachos are Andean potatoes: the name means "Potato Horn" in Quechuan. Stunning foot long, red skinned and pink fleshed spuds are fun to harvest. Insect and disease resistant, they set their tubers late. They stand tall at around one meter/three feet. They make good salad and chipping potatoes, are incredibly firm and keep very well.


Story of this Seed:

I found Papa Cachos when I was looking around at local potato farms and thought, "Gee, these look fun!". So, many thanks to Ken White at Saranac Valley Farm for getting me started on them. They grow well in my clay soil and this year hosted not a single Colorado Potato Beetle. They seem drought resilient, although they love a good soaking in the first week or two of planting. My customers love the yields and the fact that they grow like carrots - vertically. These spuds have become very difficult to find.


Growing Tips:

Soak them in before covering with soil, it will help with germination. I employ hay mulch to keep weeds down and help them stand.

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Questions 4 Total

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    Ok now are your Papa Cacho available? If they aren’t when will you have them available? Your question and answer category is hard to follow..

    Posted by Norman Davis on 04/04/2024

    Answers 1

    • Hello,
      The Q and A setup is not my design, it is the design of SeedWise. Yes, the Papa Cachos are ready. I will update the listing so that you can order what you like. Let me know if you have any further questions.

      Posted by Kia-Beth Bennett on 04/04/2024

  • Answer this question

    Hi,
    I'm very sorry about this, but I inspected the last of my stored seeds yesterday. Given the fluctuating humidity levels of my root cellar this year, I no longer feel comfortable sending them out to fellow growers. I am happy to put you on the emailing list for next Spring, when the potatoes are just coming out of storage. Again, I apologize, as I really should have removed this listing in June, when most of my shipping is done.

    Posted by Kia-Beth Bennett on 07/30/2023

    Answers 0

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    Hi,
    If you want to try growing them now, I will ship them out!! I'll send along a planting tips sheet, but briefly: I don't often cut my spuds, but occasionally Cachos are so big that I figure, what the heck, why not?
    Hilling is helpful, or at least heavy mulching, simply because the tips of the spuds poke up out of the ground frequently.
    So sorry it took me so long to get back to you!

    Posted by Kia-Beth Bennett on 07/25/2023

    Answers 0

  • Answer this question

    Got some ordered, going to try growing them in N Florida.
    pre sprout or plant as is?
    cut them into pieces or plant whole?
    I see shipping in March, but any chance to get them now for fall
    planting? If no, March is good.
    Do they require hilling like indeterminates?
    any other suggestions?

    Posted by Dave Bross on 07/17/2023

    Answers 0

Policies

Shipping Policies

I ship USPS and do not ship before mid-March, in order to avoid the seedstock freezing.

Return & Refund Policy

At this time, all sales are final and no refunds will be issued.

If you have received seeds that don't meet your expectations, contact us, and we will work with you to resolve the issue. Thank you for shopping with us!

Papa Cacho

Unit SizePriceDescription
1 Pound $5.00 9
2 Pounds $9.00 18
5 Pounds $20.00 45
10 Pounds $40.00 90
20 Pounds $80.00 200
40 Pounds $180.00 400

$5.00