You could because it is in a shed and not outside in the winter.
It means the plant will shed all it's leaves in the winter
You can plant potatoes as early in the spring/late winter as the ground is workable. The plants can usually handle light frosts, but not ground freezing. Probably February in Louisiana.
In southern Mississippi, garden Irish potatoes are planted in the winter for spring growing. The period from January 20 to February 15 is ideal.
the tree your thinking of is called the ever green plant such as the pine tree
Chinchillas do shed they shed right before winter and right before summer. Reason is in the summer they have to loose their winter coats and before winter they shed because they need new fur for the cold days.
What we know as a potato is the root of the potato plant, where the plant stores nutrients that it can use to grow, especially in the spring when it needs to grow a new stalk and leaves, after the winter.
Some shed all year long but spring is the worst time because they shed their winter coat. They also shed vigorously in the Autumn to prepare for their winter coat. In the spring they shed their thicker winter coat to put on a thinner summer coat. In the fall the process is reversed, they get rid of their summer coat to put on a warmer winter coat.
potatoes
in my pants ;)
yes, they shed during the winter and late fall months
yes i do own a elkhound and they shed more in the summer than winter
potatoes are a plant. they are considered a starchy food.