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#1
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growing onions from seed
I have seen one or two articles which suggest sowing onion seed in
modules as follows.Put four or five seeds in each module under warm(55F)conditions,and when the seedlings are 3-4 inches high,put into a cold frame for a couple of weeks,and then plant out in early April as they are.The idea is that the onions will bulb up and push each other apart.Seems easy enough but cannot see it working well enough to provide reasonably sized onions.I am not intending to grow onions for showing,but just for the kitchen.An alternative method suggested is to just sow onions in a 5" pot,grow on and harden off,and then separate the onions and plant out singly on the onion bed.I have grown onions from seed before,and found that they do not bolt as readily as onion sets.However,I have planted out singly into modules when the onion seedlings are quite small(at the crook stage)and it is quite a fiddly job and incurs e reasonable proportion of losses.I cannot sow seed directly as the ground slopes and is very dry,so I have been using sets.But I really wish to go back to seed if I can find a good easy way.Michael |
#2
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growing onions from seed
In article 5aedf848-5370-44bc-84ab-e729c2a58986
@s8g2000prg.googlegroups.com, michael says... I have seen one or two articles which suggest sowing onion seed in modules as follows.Put four or five seeds in each module under warm(55F)conditions,and when the seedlings are 3-4 inches high,put into a cold frame for a couple of weeks,and then plant out in early April as they are.The idea is that the onions will bulb up and push each other apart.Seems easy enough but cannot see it working well enough to provide reasonably sized onions.I am not intending to grow onions for showing,but just for the kitchen.An alternative method suggested is to just sow onions in a 5" pot,grow on and harden off,and then separate the onions and plant out singly on the onion bed.I have grown onions from seed before,and found that they do not bolt as readily as onion sets.However,I have planted out singly into modules when the onion seedlings are quite small(at the crook stage)and it is quite a fiddly job and incurs e reasonable proportion of losses.I cannot sow seed directly as the ground slopes and is very dry,so I have been using sets.But I really wish to go back to seed if I can find a good easy way.Michael I tried growing from seed by planting seeds in seed trays last Autumn. They germinated and put limited growth on. I planted the seedlings out in April BUT the biggest problem was weeds. As the onion seedlings were so small and delicate it meant a lot of hand weeding as the hoe was too clumsy to get right up to them. I also planted some sets at the same time. The sets fared better than the seedlings. Unfortunately I lost lots of ripe onions (both from sets and seed) due to stem rot this year. Probably due to all the rain. First time I've ever lost any onions in many years of growing them. -- David in Normandy |
#3
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growing onions from seed
On 26 Nov, 16:04, David in Normandy wrote:
In article 5aedf848-5370-44bc-84ab-e729c2a58986 @s8g2000prg.googlegroups.com, michael says... I have seen one or two articles which suggest sowing onion seed in modules as follows.Put four or five seeds in each module under warm(55F)conditions,and when the seedlings are 3-4 inches high,put into a cold frame for a couple of weeks,and then plant out in early April as they are.The idea is that the onions will bulb up and push each other apart.Seems easy enough but cannot see it working well enough to provide reasonably sized onions.I am not intending to grow onions for showing,but just for the kitchen.An alternative method suggested is to just sow onions in a 5" pot,grow on and harden off,and then separate the onions and plant out singly on the onion bed.I have grown onions from seed before,and found that they do not bolt as readily as onion sets.However,I have planted out singly into modules when the onion seedlings are quite small(at the crook stage)and it is quite a fiddly job and incurs e reasonable proportion of losses.I cannot sow seed directly as the ground slopes and is very dry,so I have been using sets.But I really wish to go back to seed if I can find a good easy way.Michael I tried growing from seed by planting seeds in seed trays last Autumn. They germinated and put limited growth on. I planted the seedlings out in April BUT the biggest problem was weeds. As the onion seedlings were so small and delicate it meant a lot of hand weeding as the hoe was too clumsy to get right up to them. I also planted some sets at the same time. The sets fared better than the seedlings. Unfortunately I lost lots of ripe onions (both from sets and seed) due to stem rot this year. Probably due to all the rain. First time I've ever lost any onions in many years of growing them. -- David in Normandy- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Hi,David.Thanks for your reply.I.too.had problems with onion growing last year,which for me also was the first time I lost many onions due to stem rot,probably caused by downy mildew.Both the onions from seed and those from sets fared badly and I am even thinking of moving the onion patch since the existing one may well have been infected with mildew spores.I have planted and dug in some green manure on the existing patch as the type I have chosen is supposed to absorb mildew spores,but we will see.I think the main reason in the UK for this mildew,was the very wet June/July we had,which is certainly very unusual here in Herefordshire.I do not have problem with weeds on my ground,which certainly would suppress small onion plants,but with the extreme dryness of the soil.The earlier I can plant the sets,then the better crop I get.However,one is very limited as to choice of onion variety with sets and I really do wish to persevere with seed for this reason,and am looking for a way to sow onions which makes it easier to transplant.The method that I think that I will try is to sow lots of seed closely in a 5" pot,and grow them on until reasonably large and then plant out.I would welcome some advice though as to whether I would just end up with shallot sized onions-planting onions out singly into modules or trays seems to me a lot of trouble as I grow lots of onions,Best regards,Michael |
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growing onions from seed
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