Gardening
Related: About this forumGrowing onions.
I picked up some bulbs to plant alone with the cucumbers and tomatoes. I live in the Deep South, not quite as Georgia, but good enough.
Here is my question - if you plant a bulb, how many onions do you get out of it? I'm sure it is a silly question, but as a novice I've hunted high and low for information.
NRaleighLiberal
(60,567 posts)The exceptions are garlic (one clove gives you a bulb with multiple cloves) and shallots (ditto).
There is a variety called a walking onion, but it isn't easy to find (an old, old type) that gives multiple bulbs.
So you plant a small onion, and you harvest a large onion!
Major Nikon
(36,911 posts)While all onions can be propagated by bulbs, some will go to seed and some will produce multiple bulbs on their own. Since you live in the South and I assume bought your onion sets locally, I suspect you have a variety which will produce one onion from one bulb which are the most common you'll find. One advantage (or perhaps disadvantage) to multiplying onions is they will continue to come back year after year unless you dig up all the bulbs.
Aerows
(39,961 posts)Will just grow into bigger bulbs.
That's disappointing.
Major Nikon
(36,911 posts)Just push them an inch or so into well tilled soil, keep them fertilized and watered, and in a few months you'll have a nice crop of onions. Also multiplying onions don't get nearly as large.
Curmudgeoness
(18,219 posts)You will harvest a lot more onions from that starter set in weight. Growing anything yourself is satisfying. So much more that buying a bag of onions at the store.....and cheaper.
Experiment by leaving a few there to flower and see if they go to seed and produce from seeds in upcoming years. I bought some "nodding onions" as a decorative plant, and I don't know if they are edible so haven't tried them, but boy have they multiplied by leaps and bounds. I will have to try eating one because it would be a good idea to start harvesting them.
Raine1967
(11,615 posts)Onions like raised beds and loose soil.
Aerows
(39,961 posts)I'm obviously a novice at gardening, but my father is pretty good at it and he is helping me. I am going to plant the onions, just to see how it goes. I love onions, and vegetables, so I decided to take it up and try my hand at it.
Curmudgeoness
(18,219 posts)from your father than you will get here. If he has been doing this a long time, and does well, learn all that you can from him. And listen. I always regret the things that I did not learn from parents and grandparents.
Aerows
(39,961 posts)They look pretty awesome. He's a very good gardener. Not just the onions, but the tomato plants, too
I love my little garden!!!!
Erich Bloodaxe BSN
(14,733 posts)They flowered a few weeks ago, and I think I got a few seeds out of the deal. I tried onion sets last year, and wasn't impressed with my yield, but then my soil mostly sucks, even when I amend it.
Aerows
(39,961 posts)I'm kind of a novice but my father assures me that if we build a trellis box, they will grow like crazy. Plus, I'm a daughter that gets to hang out with her dad
Aerows
(39,961 posts)I thought maybe a couple of the little bitty bulbs would go, but they got so big, I had to get a box planter for them. There are green heads that look like wheat grass after just this much time! I have 40 of them in the planter and it seems like all of them are trying to burst out and get the sun.
I will have another box if I need one if they get too crowded, but I'm so thrilled. My little garden is growing!
mopinko
(71,961 posts)have little sets to sell at my plant sale.
i think where you are you can let some flower and just bury the head after the seeds ripen, and you will have a nice little patch in the spring.
Aerows
(39,961 posts)and they would come up in spring?
I'm doing bulbs on this batch.
mopinko
(71,961 posts)i'm just saying that where you are they will self seed. you can give them a shove by pushing the seed heads into the ground in the late fall. or just scatter them and rake them in.
this means you have to leave a few for seed, tho.