Well, if you think about it, it wouldn't be worth planting one shallot or onion to give you one shallot or onion. You may as well eat it. Sorry, that sounds stupid, but I hope you get my point.
You can keep some (small) shallots from a crop to plant for your next year's crop, or you can sow seed and use the resulting small shallots the following year. Or you can just eat them all.
One seed=1 bulb
One set=some bulbs
There are benefits for most small-scale gardeners to using sets rather than seeds - it's quicker and they are less prone to bolt. Seeds are cheaper, of course, but there are not many available to us in the UK.
On the onion side, it is more usual to grow from seed and commonplace to sow a few seeds together and thus get a clump - you get something that looks not unlike a bunch of shallots, but they haven't formed in the same way.
If you were growing for show, you might prefer seeds because the bulbs don't have to touch each other and should be more uniform.
I hope I haven't confused the matter even more!
You can keep some (small) shallots from a crop to plant for your next year's crop, or you can sow seed and use the resulting small shallots the following year. Or you can just eat them all.
One seed=1 bulb
One set=some bulbs
There are benefits for most small-scale gardeners to using sets rather than seeds - it's quicker and they are less prone to bolt. Seeds are cheaper, of course, but there are not many available to us in the UK.
On the onion side, it is more usual to grow from seed and commonplace to sow a few seeds together and thus get a clump - you get something that looks not unlike a bunch of shallots, but they haven't formed in the same way.
If you were growing for show, you might prefer seeds because the bulbs don't have to touch each other and should be more uniform.
I hope I haven't confused the matter even more!
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