Thanks all.
I'll give them a week before I sow again.
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Square foot gardening.
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Originally posted by .commander View PostHow long do they take to Germinate? Mine have had 2 weeks and no action.
Or, you could sow small pinches of 8-10 seed in modules on a windowsill, then plant out 9 modules per square foot once they have come up and un-looped. You'll give them a good head start that way.
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Originally posted by kernow24 View PostWon't be spring onions, unless you're growing one with a 10cm gap all round, which would be silly.
You can literally mulisow a whole bunch of 8 - 10 in a 10cm square and that's being extremely generous with spacing
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Originally posted by toomanytommytoes View PostReading the 'official' SFG message board, they seem to suggest 16 is for green onions (which presumably are like spring onions?). Some plant at 16 then thin to 9 or 4 as the season progresses.
You can literally mulisow a whole bunch of 8 - 10 in a 10cm square and that's being extremely generous with spacing
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Going to have a go at this, this year. Have bought the book and can’t put it down! I have a 8 foot by 2 foot raised bed at home so will see how it Works out.
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I grew onions very successfully at 16 per square foot they were all about 3 inches and did touch. Last year I planted Sets in a raised bed and they all got white rot, I think the sets were infected as it has never been in my garden before.
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I came in belatedly to update this thread. Surprised to see some recent activity.
Originally posted by rary View PostI have been considering trying THE SFG method myself, I have been reading Bartholomew's book but I have doubts about the recommended spacings like 16 onions into one square and I note the m.b thinks 9 per square is too many so will have to rethink on what system I will use
I ordered some autumn planting garlic from the garlic farm in September. I didn't get round to sowing them until December. 4 per square apart from Elephant garlic which is one per square. That will take up 12 squares in total. Remaining six squares in that raised bed will be devoted to onion.
Bed two - I'm contemplating resowing calabrese since I've had such a good harvest. But the leaves take up so much space that I have to sow them diagonally so each plant has an empty square to the north, south, east and west of the plant. It wastes so much space. I'm considering growing sweetcorn in between, and may be some brussel sprouts at the very edge of the bed.
(The remainder - potatoes, carrots, tomatoes and strawberries shall be grown in pots. I'm going to give jalapeno and padron peppers a miss since they don't do well in my garden).
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You must be busy (doing nothing) rary as its taken you nearly 2 weeks to find the time to reply to my exceedingly helpful suggestion.
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Originally posted by veggiechicken View PostYou could measure a square foot of soil (or paper) and lay your onions out on it, leaving a little space around each, and see how many you can fit in.
It'll give you something useful to do.
doing nothing
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You could measure a square foot of soil (or paper) and lay your onions out on it, leaving a little space around each, and see how many you can fit in.
It'll give you something useful to do.
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Originally posted by Mark_Riga View Post16 onions per square foot could be reasonable. Each onion would be 3" diameter if they grow well and finish up touching. Using 9 should give 4" diameter bulbs. So depends what you want in the kitchen. Radish and carrots are leafier than onions so need proportionately more room (the roots won't touch when ready to harvest). You could weigh up in shops how big are the ones that you like using.
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Reading the 'official' SFG message board, they seem to suggest 16 is for green onions (which presumably are like spring onions?). Some plant at 16 then thin to 9 or 4 as the season progresses.
Leave a comment:
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16 onions per square foot could be reasonable. Each onion would be 3" diameter if they grow well and finish up touching. Using 9 should give 4" diameter bulbs. So depends what you want in the kitchen. Radish and carrots are leafier than onions so need proportionately more room (the roots won't touch when ready to harvest). You could weigh up in shops how big are the ones that you like using.
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Originally posted by toomanytommytoes View Post16 per square is the same planting density as carrots. Maybe that is for spring onions rather than bulb onions?
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