Varieties
- Nooksack (Solanum tuberosum)
ORIGIN: Nooksack
was selected in Washington from a cross of Kennebec x A501-13. It
was tested as WN168 and released in 1973 by the Washington Experiment
Station and the USDA.
CHARACTERISTICS: Nooksack is late maturing and produces a medium
to high yield of tubers with good appearance and excellent quality.
It is well suited for frozen French fry production but can also be
used in the fresh market.
Plants are large, upright to spreading. Stems are
few and large with inconspicuous wings and slightly swollen nodes.
Leaves are very large and dark green. Young leaves often have merged
leaflets. Flowers are sparse and borne on very short peduncles. Buds
are green, corollas medium-sized and white, anthers large and orange.
Tubers are oblong to long and flattened. Skin is heavily
and uniformly russeted. Eyes are shallow, few and unevenly distributed.
Dormancy is exceptionally long.
STRENGTHS & WEAKNESSES: Nooksack
is resistant to most external and internal defects including second
growth, growth cracks, stress malformations, hollow heart, sugar
ends, blackspot bruise, heat necrosis and net necrosis caused by
leafroll virus. It is resistant to Verticillium wilt, Rhizoctonia
and common scab. It is susceptible to PVX, PVY and PLRV. Nooksack
is an exceptional storage variety due to its long dormancy and low
sugar content. It has high tuber solids and makes high quality frozen
French-fried products. Yields of Nooksack can be somewhat low as
a result of a low tuber set and slow emergency due to long tuber
dormancy. These problems can be minimized by pre-warming the seed
and planting at a relatively close spacing.
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