Monday, December 26, 2016

The Huachuca potato




The Huachuca Potato ( S.fendleri )

Eureka , I’ve found it! ( maybe), for 2 years now I have been searching for the Elusive “Huachuca Potato” . It is a wild mountain relative, of the more common potatoes we all use. This Particular type of 'tater ( Solanum fendleri ) is  a native of the U.S. Southwest and northern Mexico.

I first heard about this Potato during a chance meeting with a Botanist while I was out hiking one day. We talked about all of the unique species that are found only in the Chiricahua and Huachuca mountains. Supposedly this species has been crossed with domestic types in hopes of making common potatoes resistant to the Columbia root-knot nematode. Wild potatoes growing high above the desert in southeastern Arizona may hold the genetic key to stopping this pest.

This Botanist mentioned the “Huachuca potato” as one of the oldest known cultivated crops in these mountain ranges. That is a pretty cool bit of local history.  I began researching this plant and discovered the types of habitat and elevations where it could possibly be found.

The other day while exploring a wash – one of the only true washes I have ever found in the Huachucas, (washes have a stone floor – arroyos have a sandy floor – google it. ). At an elevation of around 7000 feet, I found a sandy area in the bend of the wash. The area had been well rooted through by Javalina, and I was curious what they had been eating.  Taking my walking stick, I raked around in the sandy soil and unearthed what looked like a small red potato!

Needless to say I was a bit excited, I looked around some more but failed to locate any other tubers.
I dug a small hole in the soil and filled it with water from my Nalgene bottle then replanted the little red 'tater.

Im going back to the location in mid may ( if im in the area ) and see if it ( or other plants ) had sprouted. Can’t wait!

Tomahawk

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