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If you group your veg as brassicas, roots, or others, then the onions/leeks come under the 'others' and so can follow roots. You will need to add compost/organic matter to the soil to feed this group, just as if you would for peas/beans. Hope this makes sense.
One of the problems may be that the carrot bed is defficient in nutrients and organic matter. As long as you beef it up with compost/manure once the carrots are finished and give a top dressing of a general purpose fertiliser, I see no reason why onions couldn't follow carrots!
My Majesty made for him a garden anew in order to present to him vegetables and all beautiful flowers.- Offerings of Thutmose III to Amon-Ra (1500 BCE)
My onions (300) are going in when the runners have finished and where the peas were (same bed). The manure layer that went in May (well rotted) is still a layer of just under an inch thick.
Snadger would this be ok or do I really need to dig it in to the clayey soil underneath or can I just plant through the manure?
Hayley B
John Wayne's daughter, Marisa Wayne, will be competing with my Other Half, in the Macmillan 4x4 Challenge (in its 10th year) in March 2011, all sponsorship money goes to Macmillan Cancer Support, please sponsor them at http://www.justgiving.com/Mac4x4TeamDuke'
I can't remember where but I read not long ago that planting onions, leeks and carrots together helps keep their pests off because of the smell from the other plants, I would guess that that would mean it's ok to plant onion and leeks after carrots. I would put some manure on the bed first though, on a blog I read I saw a picture of a bed on onions, half that had been manured and the other half hadn't, and it makes a BIG difference.
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