Glenn Berman and Peter Goren lay out the footprint of the new grape arbor |
Plans have been drawn, consultations have been had, materials are being assembled, and on Wednesday Peter and Glenn laid out the grape arbor which we are carving out from an uncultivated space adjacent to the VegHeadz Garden. The arbor, designed to stretch 16’ long and 8’ wide, will host several varieties of grapes and will provide an informal laboratory for growing dooryard grapes and a cool shady place for gardeners to gather, catch their breath, and exchange ideas.
But there’s more going on at the Garden. It’s time to plant alliums—onions, garlic, leeks and shallots. The VegHeadz planted sweet onion transplants on Wednesday and will plant sets for multiple varieties of garlic, shallots and multiplying onions next week.
Granex onion transplants ready to go in the ground |
There’s a lot to be said about onions because they have different growing habits and requirements than many other vegetables. Two sets of characteristics distinguish onion types. The first is important depending on where you live.
Should you plant long day or short day bulbing onions? In our north Florida area, short day onions work best. In more northern latitudes, onions are grown in the summer when days are long. Because onions need cooler weather to grow well, here in north Florida we grow onions in fall and winter when days are shorter. Therefore we want to grow onions that have a lower requirement for hours of sunlight — hence short day.
The second characteristic depends on how you wish to use your harvest. Do you want bulbing onions, which once harvested must be planted again next year, or do you use more scallions or flavoring types, most of which are perennial and are classified as multiplying or bunching onions. They can be partially harvested and left to continue growing.
A third question is what’s the best way to plant onions, with seed, transplants, or sets?
Bulbing onions are the most tricky to grow. We have had success with sweet Granex onions, which is the variety we planted from transplants on Wednesday. Transplants usually come in bundles of 50 or 100. We ordered them this year from an onion farm in Texas which ships onion seedlings to Georgia every year. Only approved yellow Granex varieties are allowed in the 20 county region surrounding Vidalia, Georgia, which grow “Vidalia” onions. Sweet Granex onions were developed in Texas by crossing a variety known as 1015 with Bermuda onions. While we can grow these sweet onions, and they are delicious, Vidalia onions are uniquely sweet because of the soil in the area where they are grown in Georgia, which is low in sulphur.
Various types of multiplying onions, shallots and garlic ready to be planted |
For more about the different types of onions and how to grow them, see this article published in the Tallahassee Democrat several years ago: http://blogs.tallahassee.com/community/2018/12/20/meet-the-onion-family/ and another good reference: https://nwdistrict.ifas.ufl.edu/hort/2021/12/15/up-your-gardening-game-with-sweet-onions/.
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