Xtremehorticulture

Plant Garlic Cloves and Onion Seed in October and Early November in Southern Nevada


This is the ideal time to plant garlic from cloves and
onions from seed. I have grown perhaps 25 or 30 different varieties of garlic
and about as many sweet onions. I have not found a garlic or onion yet that has
not done well in our climate. Both long day and short day onions do well here,
from Washington’s Walla Walla to Georgia’s Vidalia sweet onion. Garlic as well from softneck types to hard neck.
Walla Walla onion grown at the UNCE orchard in North Las Vegas
            It is
too late to order garlic for planting or onion seed. You can still find onion
seed in some stores. Most of the garlic is imported and not all that
interesting but you can find some specialty garlic at the farmers markets or
specialty stores like Whole Foods you can use for planting. 
Garlic planted with drip tape and mulched with straw now harvesting scapes (flower stalks with unopened flowers)
            Break
down the garlic bulb into its cloves. This will leave tiny wounds on the fat
end where they were attached. Select only the largest cloves for planting and
the rest for cooking. Inspect the cloves very closely and if any have tiny
brown spots on the skin of the clove then use them for cooking as well and do
not plant them. 
            Leave
the separated cloves out overnight and let the wounds heal. The day you plant
garlic cloves, soak them in tepid water for a couple of hours first. This will
speed up their emergence from the soil. 
            Plant
these cloves in prepared garden soil about two inches deep and four inches
apart with the fat end down. At this time of year, I would water these cloves daily
if the soil drains easily. If your soil does not drain easily, then irrigate every
2 to 3 days. Once they have emerged you can water less often.
Volunteers separating the cloves out from the bulbs for planting. These were purchased as certified disease free planting stock but you can use store bought garlic in a pinch.
            Broadcast
onion seed on top of good garden soil. The seed doesn’t need to be spaced far
apart since you are just going to grow them into transplants and move them next
March. When you move these transplants they will be planted about 4 inches
apart into rows or blocks. That is when proper spacing is critical.

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