TopVeg – growing veg,fruit&herbs

July 11, 2010

How to Grow Spring Onions

Filed under: salad — Tags: — TopVeg @ 7:25 am

Spring onions, also known as salad onions or scallions,  are delicious when young, becoming more pungent as the stems enlarge and start to bulb.  Eat them freshly pulled, uncooked, in salads.  Both the white bulb and the green leaves are eaten.  Sometimes they are chopped & added to a hot dish just before serving.

Spring-Onion

Spring-Onion

Successional sowings throughout the season give a constant supply.

spring-onion-row

spring-onion-row

Sow seeds March to August, every 3 weeks for continuous crops. Sow seeds thinly  1-2cm (½ to ¾in) deep, ideally in broad drills. Allow 30cm (12in) between drills.

Soil should be fertile, dug & broken down to a fine seedbed. 

No thinning is necessary.

Water well, do not allow to dry out

Weeds should be hoed out between the rows when they are small.  Pull out any weeds appearing in the drills.

SpringOnionBunch

SpringOnionBunch

Harvest: May to October, later sowings may remain through to December if weather remains mild.  Harvesting can usually start 6-8 weeks after sowing

May 8, 2007

Vegetable Growing in Containers.

Filed under: salad — Tags: , , , , — TopVeg @ 5:17 pm
Vegetables can be grown in containers as well as in the vegetable
garden. All sorts of containers may be used, such as yoghurt pots,
cream cartons, plantpots or tubs. These may be kept on the windowsill,
doorstep, patio, balcony, roofgarden or in a windowbox.
salad-leaves,-radish&onions

salad-leaves,-radish&onions

 

Salad crops are easy to grow in containers. Radish, spring onions and
salad leaves grow quickly and are are happy in tubs. Successive sowings,
every two weeks ensure a constant supply.

The pots should have good drainage. Holes punched in the bottom of
yoghurt & cream cartons allow water out. Place the cartons in a saucer,
to catch the water draining through, so it does not make a mess. If
there are no drainage holes, the pots need to be large enough to hold
some stones, or broken crocs, which together act as a water catchment area.

Compost, or growing medium, is sold in supermarkets & garden centers.
It is possible to use garden soil, and the soil on mole hills is ideal.
But this is likely to be home to various bugs and worms which could eat
the growing vegetables, particularly as the pests cannot move away to
find any other food.

Vegetables grown in containers need to be in a light place. But avoid
placing them in a position where they will be baked by the sun. The
vegetables plants will need constant, probably daily, watering so that
they are always damp.

These French Breakfast radish were sown 2 weeks ago.

bowl-of-radish

bowl-of-radish

 

Spring onions grow more slowly. These White Lisbon onions have taken 2
weeks to emege.

spring-onion-in-pot

spring-onion-in-pot

 

Lettuce seeds are quite vigorous. A pot of mixed salad leaves can be treated as a ‘cut & come again’ crop.

mixed-salad-leaves-in-pot

mixed-salad-leaves-in-pot

The mixed salad leaves have different shapes, colours and textures,
giving a pleasing variety.

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