News:

Picture posting is enabled for all :)

Main Menu

Spring Onions

Started by jo9919, July 01, 2008, 22:41:13

Previous topic - Next topic

tim

Clever!

So - as one comes to realise, you're growing them as Spring Onions, rather than Shallots.

Fine, if they're from seed, but extravagant if from sets.

Keep at it - I'm only rattling on for fun!

tim


RSJK

White lisbon will only bulb if allowed to do so
Richard       If it's not worth having I will have it

Sparkly

I grew spring onions (white lisbon) by sowing them in a pot and tranplanting them into a raised bed with good results. I also left the pot (about a 5") with a number of seedlings and they grew in there too! About 12 spring onions from a 5" pot. From this experience I think I will be trying growing spring onions in a 10" pot next year and not bother with them on the plot.

kt.

Quote from: Sparkly on July 05, 2008, 20:36:40
About 12 spring onions from a 5" pot. From this experience I think I will be trying growing spring onions in a 10" pot next year and not bother with them on the plot.
I had this with radish after no joy on the plot.  Will try it next year with spring onions too then.   ;)
All you do and all you see is all your life will ever be

davyw1

Quote from: tim on July 05, 2008, 20:34:11
Clever!

So - as one comes to realise, you're growing them as Spring Onions, rather than Shallots.

Fine, if they're from seed, but extravagant if from sets.

Keep at it - I'm only rattling on for fun!

HEHEHE Love it Tim, i can,t remember the last time i bought a Shallot Bulb. 
When you wake up on a morning say "good morning world" and be grateful

DAVY

davyw1

Quote from: Richard Kinson on July 05, 2008, 20:35:52
White lisbon will only bulb if allowed to do so
How do you stop nature.
When you wake up on a morning say "good morning world" and be grateful

DAVY

RSJK

#46
white lisbon sown in September should have been ready in Late may, but because of mild winter were ready for pulling in March
Richard       If it's not worth having I will have it

cornykev

I had no joy with springys last year, and this year I had to re sow a whole line and even then  only the middle third came through (white lisbon ) and are looking very healthy, I re sowed the other two thirds with laser and they came through ok.  ;D ;D ;D
MAY THE CORN BE WITH YOU.

kt.

I do not know why but for some reason I always thought spring onions were fast croppers like radish until this thread,  not 10 weeks plus.  Lesson learnt..... RTFQ (or rather whats on the packaging instructions)
All you do and all you see is all your life will ever be

davyw1

I don,t tend to bother with spring onion, i prefer the Japanese bunching onion. Sometime i wonder why i bother with them.
I thinned out the Welsh Onions this morning
This is what i transplanted

[attachment=1][attachment=2]

This is what i am giving away after swapping a bunch half the size for six Duck eg[attachment=3]gs

And this is what i have left. Why am i growing other onions. I am not well i tell you
When you wake up on a morning say "good morning world" and be grateful

DAVY

davyw1

Oh i forgot these two rows
When you wake up on a morning say "good morning world" and be grateful

DAVY

betula

You know your onions Davyw1 :)

A great gardener :)

tim

How many in the Family, Davy?

Do you chuck them in & thin, or sow thinly?

And do you do Roast Spring Onions?

I must be the only one who/that finds their flavour quite different to/from any other onion.

jo9919

Quote from: tim on July 06, 2008, 11:52:05


I must be the only one who/that finds their flavour quite different to/from any other onion.

You're not the only one Tim.

I find the taste of spring onions very different from other onions. I love them in a salad, but my favourite is on my cheese sarnies.

Jo.

tim

Now - three guesses - they'll all be wrong!!

Powered by EzPortal