Plant Onions
Onions are easy to grow, and make good additions to many dishes when chopped and cooked. However, like most plants, they do have certain conditions they prefer. For instance, raised beds or rows are the best for onions because they prefer soil that drains well. You can be finding and creating the perfect location while your onions are still growing indoors. With a little work, you can find the perfect place to plant your onions.
Contents
Steps
Starting Onions Indoors
- Buy onion seeds.
- Pick the right onion for your climate. Long-day onions, which means they need lots of sunlight, do better in northern climates. If you buy them from a local store, they should be stocking onions appropriate to where you live.
- Short-day onions do better in southern climates, where they can grow through the winter, if it's mild enough.
You'll need to find onion seeds to plant. Most garden and hardware stores will have them for sale. If you live out in the country, you may even find them at your local grocery store when the season comes around. You can also get them in the mail by ordering from an online mail-order catalog.
- Start at least 6 weeks ahead of the last frost date. You should start out seeds indoors to give them more time to grow.
- In other words, you can start seeds as early as late January.
- Starting the indoors gives them more time to leaf, which leads to bigger bulbs. If you don't want to start indoors, buy plants to use outdoors.
You can even start as early as 8 to 10 weeks ahead.
- Plant them 4 to 5 to a cell. If you have a seed starter with individual cells, you can start out by adding 4 to 5 seeds to a cell. They should be about 1/2 inch deep. A cell is just the individual cup of soil that you plant seeds in.
- If you have a flat planter inside, plant them 1/4 inch apart.
- You still want to plant them 1/2 an inch deep, though.
- Trim as needed. While they are growing, your plants may get too tall. When they do, they'll start drooping. If that's the case, it's fine to trim them back to 3 inches.
Finding and Creating the Perfect Location
- Find a good location. Onions should be planted in a sunny location. That means that the area doesn't get any shade from other plants, including trees or your house.
- The best way to figure out which location is sunniest in your yard is to monitor it.
- Spend a day going outside every couple of hours. Notice which areas are sunniest throughout the day.
- When choosing the location, pick the one that has the most sun for onions.
- Try raised beds.
- Start by measuring out your bed. Four feet by four feet is fairly standard, as most people can reach to the middle of the bed. Make the ground even with a shovel or rake.
- Get the wood you'll need. You'll need 4X4s as stakes for the corners. They should be a foot each. You'll also need 2X2s for the center stakes, four of them. Finally, you'll 2X6s for the sides. They need to be 4 feet long, and you'll need 8 of them.
- Lay out your 2X6s on the square. Start by screwing one 2X6 into the side of the 4X4 post, flush with the bottom and the outer edge. Place another 2X6 on top of the other one in the same position but further up the post. It should be flush with the top and right up against the first one. Screw it in.
- The next set of 2X6s should be added so that they go to the edge of the post but cover up the ends of the other boards. In other words, the first boards should run into the second, with the post sticking on the outside rather than the inside. Continue around the square until all the boards are joined. Once you've done that, measure across the square diagonally to make sure it's all square. If it's not, adjust the square by moving it slightly.
- Add the other stakes. Hammer them into the ground up against the middle of each wall on the outside, then use deck screws to attach them to the wall. Finally, add in soil.
Raised beds are structured beds with soil in the middle. They are usually bordered with wood, concrete, or wood bricks. They raise the surface of the bed above the ground.
- Create raised rows. Another option is raised rows. Raised rows are like raised beds, but they aren't structured like raised beds. Instead, you create them with just the soil.
- When the soil is dry, spread biodegradable material on top of it, such as compost or rotting hay or grass. With a garden rake or rototiller, work it into the soil until the soil is loose and crumbly.
- Stake out how you want your rows to go. You want them to be about 4 feet wide or a little shorter if you can't reach to the middle. Between the rows, you need space to walk. If you want room for a wheelbarrow, make the in-between part at least a foot wide.
- Create raised beds by moving the soil from the paths into the raised beds. A rake is good for this purpose. You may need to use a shovel near the end. To keep the paths from growing anything, line them with newspaper (5 pieces thick). You can also use cardboard. Put mulch or wood chips on top.
- Check your soil. You can find soil kits at your local gardening store. Your soil should be at between 6 and 6.8 pH.
- You may need to adjust the pH of the soil.
- If you need to make it more acidic (down towards 6.8), you'll add powdered sulfur, aluminum sulfate, or iron sulfate.
- To up the pH (make it slightly more alkaline), add lime.
- If you need help deciding how much, use a pH kit from your local university agriculture extension office, which will give you detailed instructions about what to add. Find your local extension at http://nifa.usda.gov/partners-and-extension-map?state=All&type=Extension.
- Add nitrogen. Onions need nitrogen to grow well. Therefore, always add nitrogen to the soil before planting. You can also work nitrogen in the soil in the fall to help for the next spring.
- The easiest way to add nitrogen is to use a fertilizer rich in nitrogen, available from your garden store. You simply spread it out and work it into the soil.
- However, you can also use other nitrogen-rich sources such as manure or bone meal.
Moving Your Plants Outdoors
- Harden off the plants. You should harden off the plants when it starts warming up outside, and you are getting ready to move them outside. Hardening off the plants just means you start getting the plants accustomed to being outside by giving them short visits. Start by putting them outside for a couple hours on a temperate day. It should at least be in the 40s.
- Increase the amount of time they spend outside each day by a couple of hours.
- Also, start lessening how much you water them. As they move outside, they'll get less water. You have to get them accustomed to them. Give them just enough water to keep them from wilting.
- Plant in the ground. Once you've spent a week to a week and a half hardening the plants, it's time to plant them. You can plant outside once the temperature reaches about 50 degrees Fahrenheit.
- Late March to early April is usually a good time.
- Of course, if you have late winters, you may need to wait longer.
- You can plant 2 to 4 weeks before the last frost date.
You should be sure that the temperature won't go below 20 degrees outside when you plant. Each plant should go in about 1/2 inch.
- Space out the onions. If you want especially large bulbs, put them 4 to 6 inches apart.
- The rows should be 12 inches a part.
- Whether you did rows or beds, that means you should be able to get 2 furrows (rows) per row or bed.
- Trim the plants. The plants should be about 4 inches once they are in the ground. Use shears to trim down the plants once you get them all planted.
- Water regularly. Onions need a lot of water. In fact, they need about an inch a week. If you aren't getting rain, you will need to water the onions regularly.
- If you're not sure when to water them, check the soil to see if it's moist. While the plants are leafing, it needs to always be moist. However, once a week should be sufficient as long as they get a good soaking.
- Once the bulbs start getting larger (when the plant part stops growing), the bulbs need to be kept much drier.
- Mulch as needed. You can add a layer of mulch around the plants. The mulch will suppress weeds coming up.
- Organic materials also improve the soil over time.
- Mulch helps the soil retain water, as well.
- However, you'll need to remove the mulch once the bulbs start to enlarge. You should see them start pushing up the soil a bit. The bulbs need to be drier, and mulch retains too much moisture.
Mulch is just a layer of material you put over the dirt. It can be things like bark pieces, grass clippings, or straw, as well as inorganic materials such as stones, plastic, or brick chips. You can find mulch for sale at your local garden store, though you can also just use grass clippings from your yard.
- Wait to harvest. For large, dry bulb onions, you'll need to wait at least 100 days but up to 175 days to harvest. If you're fine with green onions, you can harvest them in as little as 3 weeks to a month.
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Sources and Citations
- http://www.harvesttotable.com/2011/05/onion_growing_tips/
- ↑ http://www.almanac.com/plant/onions
- http://www.heirloom-organics.com/guide/va/guidetogrowingonions.html
- ↑ http://www.growinggardens.org/hardening-off-plant-starts
- ↑ http://www.urbanorganicgardener.com/2012/01/how-to-determine-the-amount-of-sunlight-your-garden-gets/
- http://www.bhg.com/gardening/yard/garden-care/how-to-build-a-raised-bed/#page=2
- http://www.bhg.com/gardening/yard/garden-care/how-to-build-a-raised-bed/#page=3
- http://www.bhg.com/gardening/yard/garden-care/how-to-build-a-raised-bed/#page=6
- http://www.growingvegetablegardens.com/create_raised_rows.html
- ↑ https://bonnieplants.com/growing/growing-onions/
- https://bonnieplants.com/library/why-does-ph-matter/
- http://www.vegetablegardener.com/item/3796/fertilizing-its-mainly-about-nitrogen/page/all
- ↑ http://www.finegardening.com/video-how-plant-onions
- http://www.nrcs.usda.gov/wps/portal/nrcs/detail/az/home/?cid=nrcs143_023585