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Vegetable Varieties for Gardeners is a citizen science program
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'Island Sunshine' Potatoes |
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Sub-Category: |
Late Season
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Sub-Category 2: |
| Description: |
Late-season. 2- to 3-inch, round tubers with yellow skin and dry, mealy, golden-yellow flesh. Good storage. Highly resistant to late blight and good resistance to scab. Medium-sized plants.
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Days To Maturity: |
NA |
Seed Sources: |
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Rating Summary |
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Overall: (3.5 Stars)
Taste: (3.5 Stars)
Yield: (3.5 Stars)
Ease/Reliability: (3.5 Stars) |
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Reviews |
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Login to share your Review of Island Sunshine.
Number of Reviews: 2
KEY: O=Overall Rating, T=Taste, Y=Yield, E=Ease
Reviewed on 02/21/2011 by
macinator
- An experienced gardener
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Overall
Taste
Yield
Ease
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Trumbull, Ohio, United States
Frost Free Season: 163 - 183 days
Soil Texture: Clay
Garden Size: Large - More than 1,600 square feet (40' x 40')
Sun Exposure: More than 8 hours per day
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2008 was my first year for potatoes and I grew blight resistant varieties. Elba was one and this was the other. Yield was excellent, but the potatoes were smaller than I prefer. Flavor was very good also. |
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Reviewed on 04/29/2006 by
skiman
- An experienced gardener
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Overall
Taste
Yield
Ease
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Franklin, New York, United States
Frost Free Season: 103 - 123 days
Soil Texture: Loam
Garden Size: Large - More than 1,600 square feet (40' x 40')
Sun Exposure: More than 8 hours per day
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Island Sunshine is unusual in that it was developed by a private breeder. In 1984, using old fashioned open pollination techniques, Gerrit Loo of Springwillow Farms, Kensington, PEI, Canada crossed Dutch varieties, Alpha x Irene. It must be noted that some sources say he crossed Irene x Irene, while others say the male parent is unknown. Regardless, he ended up with a bright yellow fleshed potato with resistance to late blight and common scab. Mr. Loo and his brother Everit had begun potato breeding experiments to achieve disease resistance in the 1970s; Island Sunshine was the culmination of this work. The Loos registered Island Sunshine as a new variety in 1995 and they received USDA plant variety protection in June 2000. Springwillow Farms began its transition to organic farming in 1993. |
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Vegetable Varieties for Gardeners is a citizen science program, © 2004-2025, All Rights Reserved
Cornell Garden Based Learning, Cornell University College of Agriculture & Life Sciences, Horticulture Section
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