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loisthegardener_nc7b

Should I Leave Bulbils in Ground Another Year?

I've tried to research this but am not finding an answer. I planted bulbils last fall, and they have not yet grown into bulbs with cloves. Should I leave them in the ground for another year, or should I dig them up and replant them in 4 months? Thanks.

Comments (7)

  • catherine_nm
    13 years ago

    If they aren't in your way, you can leave them in the ground. If you grow garlic very much, you will find that a few bulbs get missed during harvest, and the garlic grows just fine the next season without ever having been dug, dried, and replanted. (It's just like missing a few potatoes and having and endless supply of them coming up in future years.)

    If they are in your way, dig them and set aside while you do your summer garden, then plant again in the fall. Garlic is really very forgiving.

    Catherine

  • loisthegardener_nc7b
    Original Author
    13 years ago

    Thanks, Catherine!

  • rxkeith
    13 years ago

    when i plant bulbils, i plant them fairly close together about 2 inches apart. that gives them enough space to form a round or 1 large clove. that round can then be replanted in the fall to give you a normal size bulb of garlic the following year. 2 inches apart isn't far enough for a large round to grow into a bulb of garlic. they need 5-6 inches of space between cloves. if you planted the bulbils far enough apart, you can leave them in the ground. if not then i would dig them up, separate out the ones that may have formed small bulbs, then plant back the best looking rounds.

    keith

  • loisthegardener_nc7b
    Original Author
    13 years ago

    Maybe the spacing is why it seems most people like to dig up their garlic even if they just plan to replant it in a month or so. That wasn't making sense to me until just now. Thanks!

  • rxkeith
    13 years ago

    the garlic bulbils i planted last year that were given to me by a kindly soul all divided into bulbs. not one single round to be found. never had that happen before. some kind of hard neck, not one i have grown before, so don't know what kind. some bulbs are pretty good size considering what was planted. the full size cloves produced some nice bulbs. i'll be planting more of this one in the fall.

    keith

  • promethean_spark
    13 years ago

    Some garlics produce larger bulbils than others. I grew german white porcelain bulbils this last season and none of them grew larger than a marble. I 'sowed' them in rows 3" apart with about a 1/2" spacing, and the plants came up with at most 1/8" diameter stems.

    The bulbils themselves though were only about the size of rice grains, this year I got some turbin garlic bulbils that are already 1/4" - which I imagine will produce considerably larger plants.

    Since the plants are small the first year, you could easily grow many in a 1g nursery pot and save the trouble of trying to protect them around weeds and taller plants that would out-compete them.

  • loisthegardener_nc7b
    Original Author
    13 years ago

    Funny you should mention the 1 gallon pot.. I planted some of the bulbils last fall in a 5 gallon bucket. They sailed through winter and sprouted well with just an inch of mulch on the top. They did not mature as much as I expected, though, so I think even the 5 gallon pot got too dry during our high 90s weeks. If I leave them in that pot, I will have to either get some kind of water reservoir for the pot or add a thicker layer of mulch.

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