Yacon, Oca, Mashua and Ulluco

A lot of people are talking about these 4 Andean root vegetables right now.  I’ve mentioned them before in a post on the so-called Lost Crops of the Incas.

I’ve never successfully grown Ulluco.  I’ve tried twice.  It’s a very fussy plant, that doesn’t like it too hot or too cold, and is very sensitive to frost.  Most people I know who have grown this spend a lot of time carrying in- and outdoors, depending on the weather, and this is more work than I’m willing to invest into it.  If you try this, depending on your climate, you should consider it very experimental.

I grew oca and mashua (añu) for several years.

The problem with mashua for me was always getting it through winter storage, as mine would always start rotting sometime around January.  When I can build something better for winter root storage, I’ll probably try this again.  I liked the taste of mashua, sort of like very aromatic potatoes, and I know a lot of people now who are growing it.  This is certainly worth trying.

In the end, I didn’t find oca interesting enough to keep growing it.  It’s also a little difficult for northern locations because it’s daylight sensitive.  This means you have to keep the frost tender plants alive well into the winter and close to the winter solstice.  If I had a garden that was part of my house, this would be easier, but having to travel to a community garden makes this more difficult.  I’ve sent tubers of this to a number of people over the years.

I grow Yacón every year.  I’ve also sent out propagation tubers to quite a few people now, at least 15-20 over each of the last several years.  This is very easy to grow and store, and very prolific in the garden.  I made a document about growing yacon you can download here.

Anyway the main purpose of this post is to formally announce I will no longer be sending out tubers of these plants to people living in Europe or the US.  If you’ve already sent me an email asking about this, I can probably still send it, but I’m not accepting any more requests for the future.

People in the US can get Oca and Mashua from Peace Seeds, and Yacon from Nichols Nursery.  In the UK you can get oca and yacon from the Real Seed Catalogue, and they ship Europe wide.  In addition, Frank offers some of these tubers from his garden too, in limited quantities.  People who live other places who can’t find another source can still get in touch with me, and I’ll try to help.  The other exception is for people who offer seeds or tubers for trade over the Internet on their blog or other public space.  I’ll be glad to be contacted by these people too, but sending to the US is often not possible regardless.

The main problem with sending out these tubers, usually free of charge, is that I’m just not a seed company or nursery and it’s just too much work.  These tubers only go out around now, and I get emails from people all year round asking for them.  I’m not able to manage the logistics of keeping a waiting list and remembering to sent them at the right time.  I also frequently get requests for large numbers of tubers or to have them sent in a special way, declared a special way for customs, and so on, and if you have special requests like these you should be ordering from a company anyway.

In addition, of the probably 100 tuber samples I’ve sent out in the last few years, hardly anyone has gotten in touch later to tell me how it went and I’m not aware of anyone re-offering them anywhere.   All it means is I get busier and busier each year as the popularity of these tubers grow, the availability of the tubers in Internet seed trading doesn’t increase and I have no idea if what I’ve sent out is even still being grown.

Open Source Seed Bank

Todd, who’s a participant on this blog, runs OSS Bank.  It’s a participatory seed bank, where members request seed samples which they can grow out and return to the seed bank in larger quantities if they choose to.  They’ve had 2 recent newsletters, here and here, and their discussion forum can be found here.

If you’re looking for a place to meet other seed saving gardeners and trade seeds, be sure to have a look.

Missing Comments

If you leave a comment here, it should show up almost instantly.  If you don’t see it within a few hours, or it disappears, please let me know.  I don’t moderate comments.  If for some reason I need to delete your comment and you’ve left a valid email address, I’ll send an email explaining why I did it.  I got an email a few days ago from someone who’s comment didn’t appear, which is why I’m mentioning this now.

The problem is I use a program called Akismet to delete spam comments, and it sometimes makes a mistake.  If you tell me your comment didn’t show up, I can hunt it down and bring it back.  If I didn’t use Akismet, I would get around 1600 spam comments a month!  So I have to use it, and I have to accept sometimes it makes mistakes.  Every real comment here is important however, so I don’t want to lose any.

Akismet learns from mistakes, so if I find a comment it deleted by mistake, it’s less likely to happen again.  In this way, if you tell me about a lost comment, you are doing me a favor as well as others who leave comments on Akismet blogs.  Your future comments will also be less likely to get lost on other blogs in this way as well.

General Comment Policies

Since I’ve been around 5 years now, I have a pretty set policy on comments that probably isn’t very different from most other blogs.  For the sake of clarity, I’ll just explain it a bit here.

Anonymous comments are welcome.  The name, email address and URL fields are all optional.  It’s always nice however if you choose some name, even if it’s not your real one.

In general everything goes except spam.   You do however have to address the topic at hand.

While you can say anything you want, you can’t be intentionally disruptive, especially in a repetitive way.  In particular, if you have a very strong disagreement with me, this isn’t the place to get into a long discussion about it.  It’s better if you find some place else on the Internet to talk about it and leave a link from here.  While your opinions are welcome, most people who read this blog are in general agreement with me on most things, and they would find a very long and rambling statement opposing me disruptive.  This happened once for example when I posted about the relationship between eating meat and climate change, and someone wanted to spend a lot of time here talking about the virtues of an all-meat diet.  I generally won’t delete comments like this, but will ask you to move on.

This isn’t the right place to talk about very divisive and emotional issues like guns, abortion or religion.

Both myself and others have the right to leave their opinion here.  Requests to remove what I’ve written or comments from others will not be honored, and you won’t make any friends here this way either.

Within reason swearing is okay.  I don’t much myself, but if you care to you’re welcome.

If you post something illegal, I might have to delete it.

While spam is not allowed, I offer a little more latitude to hand typed commercial comments that address the topic at hand.  For example this Chinese company that produces a seeder that competes with one I posted about:

http://bifurcatedcarrots.eu/2006/09/earthway-seeder/

If you hand type something that’s creative and relevant, I’ll probably allow it.  Entertainment value is extra credit.  This is completely at my discretion.

What’s not allowed is a commercial comment that’s in stride with the topic at hand, or one that’s just a link or otherwise is not in any way creative or useful.  Of all the comments I ever delete, they almost all fall into this category.  Again, if you leave a valid email address I’ll get in touch and explain why I deleted your comment.

Comments anyone?