J**R
feeble little plants, one died already
These two shoots were tiny and feeble. They were packed in wet paper towels and had barely any leaves. One had a tiny sprout on the end. I planted them in new potting soil and one of them died immediately. The second one may survive, not sure yet. Terrible job.
K**L
How to grow these cuttings, an experiment I did so you don't have to.
***Edited to add: It's now the year after I received my cuttings from this seller. The cuttings which were sent to me were not Okinawan sweet potatoes--they were regular, orange-fleshed sweet potatoes. There was no way for me to know this until they'd had an entire season to grow and be harvested of course, and now I've been unable to contact the seller and any protection I may have had on my purchase through Amazon has expired a long time ago. I've added a picture of what I saw when I cut one of my "Okinawan purples" open. Buyer beware.When I received my slips in the mail, I was a bit perplexed. They looked nothing like the picture, there were no leaves, little to no roots, and the stems looked more like cuttings off an adult plant than slips off a tuber. The seller had kindly included two extra cuttings (I ordered four, got six) which was nice. And it doesn't really matter whether these were slips or cuttings, since sweet potatoes can be propagated from stem cuttings just as well. However I had no idea how to do this, and there were no instructions accompanying the cuttings. My first dilemma was, should I freshen up the cuttings before I put them in water or not?So I decided to snip half the cuttings to just under the next leaf/root node and leave half the cuttings untouched. I put all six into water cups of their own and set them in a south facing window which got lots of sun. Four days later two of the cuttings (one snipped, one as shipped) had shriveled up and died, and I had a discussion with another gardener who suggested I should pot them directly in soil rather than water. So I took one of the surviving cuttings from each group and put it in moist potting soil. I now had one snipped cutting in water, one snipped cutting in soil, one "as shipped" cutting in water, and one "as shipped" cutting in soil.Nine days after that, I had my winner. The first leaves of my experiment showed up on the "as shipped" in soil cutting!6 days after that, the snipped in soil and snipped in water both put out tiny leaves.Now this experiment is far from scientific. My specimen numbers are way too small, and my "in soil" cuttings did spend four days in water. But from the fact that the "as shipped" cutting made leaves at all-- let alone first--I think we can conclude that freshening up the cut on the mailed cuttings is not necessary. And it would seem that potting soil did better than water, so just pop those babies in some moist potting soil when they arrive and set on a sunny window (out of reach of your pet or toddler, if you have one)! All of my surviving cuttings are showing beautiful root development, so it may be that they'll thrive no matter what I do to them. I'm going to continue the experiment for my sake and may edit this post with further results if that's possible.
T**N
No growth
The slips were very small and weak both died and I had to order the actual potatoes to get slips this was a huge waste of money
J**E
Sad they didnt last
They started growing fast but we got a freeze and they died
C**N
5 star
Plants arrived a little brown and withered, but after a few days planted they perked up. I'll update if things go bad.Edit: a week later. They have doubled in size. I'm planning to hang these on an invisible trellis. Will try and add additional pics later.Edit: several weeks later, they are about 4.5ft and are flourishing. Pretty easy to run them along invisible trellis.Hoping for flowers and potatoes later in the year.Edit: Few months later, these plants really spread fast. I'll update with pictures when I harvest, which should be soon as it is getting cool.Edit:started harvesting. Most of the potatoes are small, but I think this was due to how late in the year I planted these. I'm still happy, and will replant in spring.Edit:Mid way through winter. I've got sprouts ready for Spring. I just stuck some of the purple potatoes in jars half way filled with water.
A**R
Need a few more pieces
The slips they send are very small and easily die, they need add a few more to give us a better chance at successful propagation, two little slips, one is not gonna make it and the second seems stunted.
E**Y
Detail and Quality
I was very disappointed upon receiving my package. My plants were dead upon arrival. It wasn't worth the hassle to return dead plants. In the end I paid for a product that I could not use.
K**E
Quick replacement
The first slips sent didn't make it. I reached out to the seller and they replaced them swiftly with very healthy looking slips. Thank you!!!!!
Trustpilot
1 day ago
1 month ago