Sweet potato vine comes in different colors and works well with flowering plants.
Gardeners turn to the sweet potato vine for its ability to power through just about anything while bringing interesting shapes, sizes, and colors to a pot or plot. A vigorous annual or a tender perennial, it thrives in the summer heat. Typically used as spillers in containers, they also make fantastic groundcovers.
Their name indicates these plants produce small tubers that you can eat like standard sweet potatoes or yams. However, they won’t be nearly as tasty. Because sweet potato vines are bred to have such unique and colorful foliage, the traits for tubers (the storage roots) have slowly died out. Sweet potato vines will spend more time focusing on growing vigorous, healthy foliage than storing nutrients in a root for later use.
Sweet Potato Vine Overview
GENUS NAME | Ipomoea batatas |
COMMON NAME | Sweet Potato Vine |
PLANT TYPE | Annual, Perennial |
LIGHT | Part Sun, Sun |
HEIGHT | 6 to 12 inches |
WIDTH | 1 to 3 feet |
FLOWER COLOR | Purple |
FOLIAGE COLOR | Blue/Green, Chartreuse/Gold, Gray/Silver, Purple/Burgundy |
SPECIAL FEATURES | Good for Containers, Low Maintenance |
PROPAGATION | Stem Cuttings |
Where to Plant Sweet Potato Vines
Sweet potato vines do best in a humid climate that’s not excessively hot, similar to their native tropical weather. No matter where you are, whether it’s cooler or warmer, make sure these plants get at least six hours of sun each day. Plant them in rich, well-drained soil.
How and When to Plant Sweet Potato Vines
Once the temperature outdoors reaches 50ºF and the last frost of winter has passed, you can plant sweet potato vines outdoors.
Remove the plant from the container, taking care not to damage the delicate stem. If rootbound, loosen the roots. The hole for planting sweet potato vines should be twice as big as the container it comes in. Place the plant in the hole at the same depth it was in the original container. Pat the soil around its base and water thoroughly. Plant them between 10 to 36 inches apart. Different types require different spacing.
Care for Sweet Potato Vines
Sweet potato vine loves lots of sunlight and does best in the summer heat. The plant is grown primarily for its superb foliage and tropical feel. Some older varieties may grace your garden with sporadic lavender blooms, but this is uncommon.
Light
Ideally, sweet potato vines will get full sun most of the day, though they can grow in partial shade. The more sun they get, the more vibrant their colors will be.
Soil and Water
When you water sweet potato vines, don’t get the soil too wet, or the plant can develop root rot. While they tolerate drought, they grow better when watered regularly and should get about an inch of water per week. The soil should be well-draining and enhanced with organic matter.
Temperature and Humidity
Keep sweet potato vines from getting overheated or letting their soil dry out. Where it’s very hot, they benefit from some shade during the day. They thrive in areas with high humidity and tolerate average humidity. They don’t do well in low-humidity areas. Sweet potato vines like warm evenings and days around 75ºF.
Fertilizer
Sweet potato vines are vigorous growers that don’t require fertilizer, but they grow more profusely when they receive it. At planting time, add a granular slow-release fertilizer with a balanced 10-10-10 ratio to the soil following the product manufacturer’s instructions regarding quantity. Water it in well and plant the vines. A single application is sufficient. Be careful not to over-fertilize; if the plants receive too much fertilizer, they’ll need to be cut back frequently.
Pruning
Consistent pruning will encourage sweet potato vines to grow more vigorously. Cut the branches no more than one third, about 1/4 inch above leaf nodes. Remove dead or dying branches to enhance the plant’s health. They tend to spread, so pruning can keep overgrowth in check.
Potting and Repotting Sweet Potato Vines
Sweet potato vines are excellent container plants. Select a 12-inch clay or plastic pot with drain holes, and fill it with good-quality potting soil. Remove the plant from its nursery container and loosen the roots slightly. Place it in the pot at the same height it was in the nursery container. Tamp the potting soil down with your hands to eliminate air bubbles and water thoroughly. It is unlikely a sweet potato vine will ever need repotting because it lives less that two years, but if it does, replace all the potting soil and select a pot 2 inches larger.
Sweet potato vines adapt well to pots because they tolerate all kinds of light. You can grow them on a covered patio, in a sunny garden, or indoors. If planted in pots, they’ll need more water than when planted in the ground, and their pots need good drainage to keep their roots from deteriorating.
Pests and Problems
Sweet potato vines are susceptible to leaf fungus. When a plant is infected, there is no cure; it should be removed from the garden and destroyed to prevent the spread of the fungus to nearby plants. Leaf fungus is known to overwinter in garden soil. To prevent the return of the fungus the following year, plant sweet potato vines in different areas of the garden each season.
Pests that are attracted to sweet potato vines include golden tortoise beetle, which will create Swiss cheese-like holes in the leaves. Other pests include aphids and caterpillars.
How to Propagate Sweet Potato Vine
You can propagate sweet potato vines with stem cuttings or by dividing a tuber.
To propagate with stem cuttings, use clean snippers to cut an 8-inch piece from a stem. The cutting can be taken from anywhere along the stem as long as it contains a leaf node. Make the cut just below the node. Remove the leaves from the bottom half of the cutting and submerge the bottom half in a glass or jar filled with water. Keep the container in a warm, slightly shady area and change the water a couple of times a week, always using room temperature water. In as little as a week—but sometimes longer—roots will start to grow. When they are 3 inches long, gently move the seedling to a small pot filled with potting soil, not garden soil.
To propagate using a tuber, dig up the tuber in fall, before the first freeze, and store it in a cool, dry place. When the tuber begins to sprout in late winter or early spring, cut it into several pieces, making sure each piece has at least one “eye,” and plant each piece 1/4-inch deep in a small pot filled with moist potting soil. Keep the pots in a warm area with bright light, but not full sun. After roots form and a seedling grows, the plant can be moved to the garden.
Types of Sweet Potato Vine
‘Blackie’ Sweet Potato Vine
Ipomoea batatas ‘Blackie’ offers purple hand-shaped foliage on a vigorous plant.
Illusion Emerald Lace Sweet Potato Vine
Ipomoea batatas ‘Illusion Emerald Lace’ is a compact selection with bright lime-green foliage and a mounding/trailing habit. It grows 10 inches tall and spreads 4 feet across.
Illusion Midnight Lace Sweet Potato Vine
Ipomoea batatas ‘Illusion Midnight Lace’ has a compact, mounding/trailing habit and rich purple foliage. It grows 10 inches tall and spreads 4 feet across.
‘Marguerite’ Sweet Potato Vine
Ipomoea batatas ‘Marguerite’ is a lovely selection with golden-chartreuse foliage.
‘Sweet Caroline’ Sweet Potato Vine
Ipomoea batatas ‘Sweet Caroline’ offers hand-shaped foliage in an intriguing shade of coppery bronze.
Companion Plants for Sweet Potato Vine
Angelonia
Angelonia is also called summer snapdragon. It has flower spires that reach a foot or two high, and they’re studded with snapdragon-like flowers in purple, white, or pink. This tough plant blooms all summer long. Some varieties are scented. While most gardeners treat angelonia as an annual, it’s a tough perennial in Zones 9-10. Or, if you have a bright, sunny spot indoors, you can keep it flowering all winter.
African Marigold
African marigold is a colorful punch of color, usually yellow, orange, or cream, for a sunny bed, border, or large container. Plants get up to 3 feet tall and produce huge 3-inch puffball blooms, while dwarf varieties get just 1 foot tall. The mounded-dark-green foliage is always clean and fresh. Grow them in a warm, sunny spot with moist, well-drained soil all summer. Zones 2-11
New Guinea Impatiens
New Guinea impatiens provide brilliant color for shady spots. The foliage is also often colorful also. These tropical plants thrive in containers with perfect soil and drainage, but they also do well in the ground as long as you take the time to improve the soil and work in plenty of compost. They’re a bit more sun-tolerant than common impatiens. Plant nursery starts in spring after all danger of frost has passed. Keep soil moist and fertilize lightly but regularly.