The perennial potato bunchin multiplier onions have produced many bubils and flowers, and it is long past time to propagate them into their own containers. Thus increasing the amount of perennial onions I have in my front yard container garden

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5 Comments

  1. I have a vid series on those. They do look like the real Yellow Potato Onion. The typical way they are grown is planting sometime between fall and the winter solstice, pulling in late summer to cure and replanting some for the following cycle. They store like rocks once cured, though there are usually some losses in curing. I've stored them more than a year. If you plant little ones, you will get a few large onions and if you plant large onions, you'll usually get more pre clump, but smaller. I used to sell them on ebay, but I've lost all my stock now.

  2. I thin out my potato onions in the spring so that there are only three or four per bunch. This produces decently sized bulbs compared to letting six or more mature in one bunch. I'm actually doing an experiment this year where I separated a few bunches into individual stalks back in late March and re-planted them to see how they mature with plenty of space. I'm curious to see if they bulk up significantly with more room.

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