Home » Horticulture Center » Vegetables » Straw Bale Gardening » 2018

A little background
Every year since 2013, when we first started experimenting with growing vegetables in straw bales, a summary has been prepared and is posted on our website. For information about straw bale gardening, including how to condition the bales, irrigation, fertilization, and other items of interest, please read the articles from previous years, as well as Garden Note #160, Straw Bale Gardening (PDF).
For detailed information about growing sweet potatoes, see Environmental Horticulture Note #102, Growing Sweet Potatoes in the Sacramento Area (PDF).
The straw bale experiment
In mid-April, 'Beauregard' and 'Nancy Hall' sweet potato slips (six slips of each variety) were received from the grower (a farm in Tennessee that was certified to ship sweet potato slips to California).
It is important to note that the California Department of Food and Agriculture has established a quarantine against the sweet potato weevil and all parts of sweet potatoes (tubers and plants/slips). The quarantine currently includes nine southern states and Hawaii, so slips grown in those states are prohibited from being shipped to California unless the grower receives a certificate issued by an authorized agricultural official indicating that the shipment originated in a non-infested area.
Since the straw bales were in the process of being conditioned and not ready for planting, the slips were planted into potting soil in six-packs until ready for planting into the bales. The slips were transplanted into three bales of wheat straw in early May.

The sweet potatoes were harvested on October 3 and during our October 10 Open Garden public event. The total harvest from 12 plants was a little over 57 pounds, with Beauregard making up most of the harvest. The Beauregard harvest also produced a whopper (“Taterzilla”) that weighed in at 10½ pounds!

Resources
- Straw Bale Gardening (PDF) Garden Note 160, explains the basics for starting a straw bale garden in your yard.
- Return to our Straw Bales introduction for links to other years.
- There is also a free ANR publication on straw bale gardening (PDF).
- The book Straw Bale Gardens (Joel Karsten, Cool Springs Press) provides detailed information about setting up the straw bales and all aspects of straw bale gardening. The author's website also provides information and photographs that may be helpful if you would like to try growing vegetables in straw bales.