No, but I do not suggest eating the portion of the potato where the sprout exsists. I simply cut awat those area in the event I ever have a spud in that condition. They generally don't last that long in my kitchen! LOL
Potatoes are roots. They are trying to sprout a new plant the same way any other plant tries to make new life.
When a plant starts to grow from a seed we say the seed germinates.
Potatoes can be grown anywhere that has a USDA zone 3 of above.
they grow in the ground The potato grows from a tuber that is one of the previous years potatoes.
yes.. probably not as well as in idaho, but u can grow them
Potatoes are usually grown from seed potatoes which are neatly cut from a potato to have one to two "eyes" which are the buds.The reason why potatoes do not follow the regular convention of flowers and seeds is because they are underground shoots i.e their roots store starch to form tubers and from these starch deposits,new shoots grow.
sprouts will grow from the potato tubule and grow more potatoes..... weird huh?
Commerical sweet potatoe plants are not grown from seed, but from the sprouts of "bulbs" or tubers known as sweet potatoes (the part you eat.)
carrots, potatoes, asparagus, Brussels sprouts, and cabbage
it sprouts because potatoes are root vegetables
Brussels sprouts grow in the spring.
potatoes, tomatoes, broccoli, sprouts
See related links.
There are a couple different ways. 1. You can lay the potato out in the sun until sprouts come out, then cut the potato into pieces so that each piece gets 1 to 4 sprouts. Then let the pieces scab out over night and plant them. Each piece will grow a new potato. 2. You can buy a small plant at a nursery or a Home Depot. 3. You can plant the entire potato and let it grow other potatoes off of it.
Potatoes, cooked cabbage, and brussel sprouts.
No potatoes need dirt to grow
Potatoes are plants. They do not grow on other plants.
No. Grapes grow in a vineyard.