Traditionally in temperate climates potatoes have been a seasonal crop. They would be harvested before the first fall frost and could be stored during the winter months. Now in some warmer areas varieties have been developed that can be grown all year.
no, they grow from tiny baby potatoes from the previous year
Potatoes do not grow back every year on their own. They need to be replanted annually in order to continue growing.
Um... 2000?
No potatoes need dirt to grow
Potatoes are typically grown from "seed potatoes," which are small potatoes saved from the previous year's crop. To grow potatoes, you plant these seed potatoes in well-drained soil, cover them with a few inches of soil, and water them regularly. As the plants grow, you can add more soil around the base of the plants to encourage more potato growth. Harvest the potatoes when the plants start to die back.
a long time about a million and a quarter years
Potatoes are plants. They do not grow on other plants.
No. Grapes grow in a vineyard.
a long time about a million and a quarter years
Potatoes do not come back every year on their own. They need to be replanted annually in order to grow new crops.
Potatoes grow underground from the eyes of a potato plant, not from seeds. The eyes sprout into new plants, which then produce more potatoes.
I think it is how much you can farm like the volume of potatoes you can grow in a certain time