Anyone who has never made a mistake has never tried anything new.
- Albert Einstein
Back in THIS POST, we announced our planting of a new
crop for us – Onions, three different types to be exact: Red Creole, Texas White and 1015 Texas sweet. We have planted green onions
before as well as shallots, but have never planted regular onions that
bulb. We love onions and I figured it
was high time we grew our own.
I planted according to the directions and followed all
the recommended steps, keeping the onion row weeded and applying chicken
litter. Then I marked my calendar for
the harvest date. We planted 42 onions
as I recall and was looking forward to the harvest.
I like to talk about when we have successes. It is kind of fun to reflect on
victories. Our first onion crop was not
a victory and it is only transparent that I show our failures as well. The harvest date coincided with the material
that I read that informed me that onions were ready for harvest when the tops
fall over.
Ripened Onions |
Here is a closer look at a couple of the Texas Sweet
onions.
Sweet Onions |
Now so far, you might be saying, “Why is that a
failure? They look fine to me.” And you would be correct. However, I haven’t shown you anything that
would show you scale. As an aside, the
above picture gives another clue as to why our first onion crop failed. We’ll talk about that in a minute.
Here is a blurry photo of one of each of the three
varieties of onions that I pulled that would give you an indication of
scale. Hint: My hands aren’t huge. These are small onions. Not cocktail onions, but not exactly what I
was hoping for.
Handful of small onions |
There were a few that were bigger than that. As you can see below, I pulled a couple that
were “tennis ball size.”
The biggest of the bunch |
I gathered my sad little bucket of onions and headed to
the patio.
Bucket of onions |
I’ll lay them out on a table and allow them to dry for a
week or so and then we’ll take them inside, chop them up and eat them. We’re not going to cry over the lackluster
onion harvest. Oh, we may cry a little when we
chop them, but that’ll be from the chemical irritant they produce when cut, not
from our lamentations over the small onions!
Drying on the Table |
While I consider this a failure, I’ll rationalized by
saying that this was our first time planting them. The first year we planted peanuts, our yield
was pathetic. However, it has increased
every year as we’re learning more about peanuts, how to grow them, care for
them and how to avoid the pitfalls.
We’ll do the same with onions.
I’m not giving up. Next year
we’re going to do much better.
So what went wrong?
Well, I read up a lot of information on it and I’ve narrowed it down to
soil fertility. The row that I planted
the onions on was from a truck load of dirt (sold as topsoil) that I had
delivered last fall and moved to the garden.
The very word “topsoil” makes you think that it is fertile soil taken
from the top layer of earth. While that
may be true, I don’t think this soil had good fertility. It didn’t have much organic matter and packed
down pretty hard. Although I did add
chicken manure and kept the onion row weeded to avoid competition from weeds,
the onions just didn’t get the nutrients they needed to flourish.
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