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Me 13-05-2006 05:33 PM

Garlic
 
What do you grow them from?
Is it a case of buying a garlic, splitting it into cloves and planting them out?

Me



[email protected] 13-05-2006 06:10 PM

Garlic
 
Yes, they are grown from the small cloves, but are best planted in
Autumn. Better to buy the specific seed ones from a garden centre as
the ones in the shop may need longer hotter weatherr than the Uk often
has


Sacha 13-05-2006 06:14 PM

Garlic
 

wrote:
Yes, they are grown from the small cloves, but are best planted in
Autumn. Better to buy the specific seed ones from a garden centre as
the ones in the shop may need longer hotter weatherr than the Uk often
has


And it's worth growing it under roses because the garlic is said to
deter aphids.
--
Sacha
www.hillhousenursery.co.uk
South Devon


June Hughes 13-05-2006 06:40 PM

Garlic
 
In message . com, Sacha
writes

wrote:
Yes, they are grown from the small cloves, but are best planted in
Autumn. Better to buy the specific seed ones from a garden centre as
the ones in the shop may need longer hotter weatherr than the Uk often
has


And it's worth growing it under roses because the garlic is said to
deter aphids.


Is it? How does it do that? (Not an awkward question - just
interested). Nick may know - he generally does.

--
June Hughes

sam 13-05-2006 07:16 PM

Garlic
 
Me wrote:
What do you grow them from?
Is it a case of buying a garlic, splitting it into cloves and planting them out?

Me


The old saying was ' plant on the shortest day and harvest on the longest'.
I always buy from a reputable seed merchant. They will only sell ones
suitable for our climate.Garlic from thegreengrocers may have come from
distant lands and may not thrive.
Yes, you split them into cloves and plant them.When first harvested they
are known as 'green garlic' and are at their best.
when dry they will keep for months ( if not eaten first).
Bon appetit !

Sam

Mike 13-05-2006 07:46 PM

Garlic
 
Garlic from thegreengrocers may have come from
distant lands


like the Isle of Wight ;-)

Mike


--
------------------------------------------------
Royal Naval Electrical Branch Association
www.rnshipmates.co.uk
International Festival of the Sea 28th June - 1st July 2007



BoyPete 13-05-2006 07:53 PM

Garlic
 
Sacha wrote:
wrote:
Yes, they are grown from the small cloves, but are best planted in
Autumn. Better to buy the specific seed ones from a garden centre as
the ones in the shop may need longer hotter weatherr than the Uk
often has


And it's worth growing it under roses because the garlic is said to
deter aphids.


I've found it deters most friends too ;)
--
London meet 2006
http://www.blackberrymoon.co.uk/meet2006/meet2006
ßôyþëtë



Gary Woods 13-05-2006 09:40 PM

Garlic
 
"BoyPete" wrote:

I've found it deters most friends too ;)


Only the friends that weren't worth having in the first place.

There's some garlic info on my personal page, in the .sig below, though it
has a North American accent. The main adjustment would be that some
hardneck types need a colder winter dormancy than much of the U.K. has.
The previous advice about "get seed garlic from close to home" is
excellent!


Gary Woods AKA K2AHC- PGP key on request, or at home.earthlink.net/~garygarlic
Zone 5/6 in upstate New York, 1420' elevation. NY WO G

James Fidell 13-05-2006 10:28 PM

Garlic
 
Gary Woods wrote:
"BoyPete" wrote:

There's some garlic info on my personal page, in the .sig below, though it
has a North American accent. The main adjustment would be that some
hardneck types need a colder winter dormancy than much of the U.K. has.
The previous advice about "get seed garlic from close to home" is
excellent!


I didn't have all my veggie beds ready last year (still digging some of
them today) -- I'm moving the veggie plot and the old beds are probably
going to end up being used for fruit and cutting flowers. Anyhow, my
garlic bulbs were delivered with all my other seeds late last year, so
I just left them in the fridge, eventually planting them out a couple of
months ago. I had a few cloves that had gone mouldy that I had to
discard, but every single clove I planted has come up and is doing very
well. I'm rather pleased :)

James

June Hughes 14-05-2006 08:57 AM

Garlic
 
In message , BoyPete
writes
Sacha wrote:
wrote:
Yes, they are grown from the small cloves, but are best planted in
Autumn. Better to buy the specific seed ones from a garden centre as
the ones in the shop may need longer hotter weatherr than the Uk
often has


And it's worth growing it under roses because the garlic is said to
deter aphids.


I've found it deters most friends too ;)

Not at all. I hope someone answers my question.
--
June Hughes

La Puce 14-05-2006 06:37 PM

Garlic
 

June Hughes wrote:
Not at all.


Off course not! I use lots of garlic and it's amazing how many people
keep turning up at diner time ;o)

I hope someone answers my question.

It's the smell. I thought for sometimes that the sap raising through a
rose (or other plants) close to garlic would also pick up on the
garlic. But it's only the smell. It deters aphids and ants. I always
sow my carrots near garlic or leeks too as this deters carrot flies.


Mike 16-05-2006 06:42 AM

Garlic
 


"Dwayne" wrote in message
...
Yes. I bought them at a grocery store in August. Split the cloves apart,
planted the larger ones and used the smaller ones. By July the following
year (after the tops started turning brown and falling over) I dug them

up,
cured them (by laying them in a warm place in the shade on my deck, so the
air could circulate around them for 10 to 12 days) and then put them in

the
coolest spot of my cellar. Then in August I started the whole process

over
again.

Dwayne (in Kansas)


Be interested to know if it was Isle of Wight Garlic ;-)

Mike


--
------------------------------------------------
Royal Naval Electrical Branch Association
www.rnshipmates.co.uk
International Festival of the Sea 28th June - 1st July 2007



Dwayne 17-05-2006 01:58 AM

Garlic
 
I couldn't tell you. It was placed in a bin for resale in a grocery store.
I picked out what I thought would be enough and started there.

Dwayne (in Kansas)

"Mike" wrote in message
...


"Dwayne" wrote in message
...
Yes. I bought them at a grocery store in August. Split the cloves
apart,
planted the larger ones and used the smaller ones. By July the following
year (after the tops started turning brown and falling over) I dug them

up,
cured them (by laying them in a warm place in the shade on my deck, so
the
air could circulate around them for 10 to 12 days) and then put them in

the
coolest spot of my cellar. Then in August I started the whole process

over
again.

Dwayne (in Kansas)


Be interested to know if it was Isle of Wight Garlic ;-)

Mike


--
------------------------------------------------
Royal Naval Electrical Branch Association
www.rnshipmates.co.uk
International Festival of the Sea 28th June - 1st July 2007






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