Many experienced summer residents and gardeners achieve truly amazing results from the potatoes they grow.
Approaching one bush for root crops is always with buckets. It is so swamped that they do not know what to do with the vegetable.
How do these people get such enviable harvests? And they do it on a regular basis and stably.

It turns out that it’s all about simple “school feeding”.
Why is it called that? Because back in the days when schoolchildren were sent to help collective farms "to pick potatoes", the method was very popular.
So, we present to your attention a “miracle mixture” of ash and compost, added to the soil.
A small amount of the product is needed for one hole.
Experienced people say: you should fertilize the soil when you plant potatoes. As a rule, this is May.
We add a handful of ash and two handfuls of compost to the hole.
Mix with a gloved hand. Or you can mix with a spatula. Right there, in the hole.
Next, we put a potato into this very hole, sprouts up. We bury it.
Those who practice this approach cannot praise the harvest enough.
Summer residents report that they can harvest half a bucket of potatoes from one bush on nutrient-rich soil.