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  1. Our onions multiply by division and can provide growers with a steady supply of green onions once established. Unlike potato onions or Egyptian walking onions, our onions do not produce seed or top sets. These onions grow more as shallots, spring onions, or table onion.

  2. Planting Heirloom Onion Transplants: Dig small holes, 1-2 inches deep, spaced 4-6 inches apart. Place each transplant in the hole, covering the roots but leaving the top of the plant exposed. Press down gently around the base and water well. Planting Heirloom Onion Sets: Make shallow holes, about 1 inch deep.

  3. 25 paź 2018 · With multiplier onions, you plant a single bulb and as they grow they split (or multiply) into a clump of bulbs. So far I’ve planted two different kinds of onions, I’Itoi and Yellow Potato Onion. Both of them are heirloom varieties with a rich history, and both are enjoying somewhat of a revival in the 21st century.

  4. 23 wrz 2021 · Allen named these heirloom onions ‘Grandpa Brown’s Multiplying Onions’ after his grandpa. As a kid, they would buy these onion sets at Zimmer’s Nursery in Beeville, plant them together, and watch them multiply.

  5. Here are descriptions and details for our different multiplier onion types: Potato or Multiplier Onions - Allium cepa v. aggregatum Potato onions are a form of shallots that can grow into large onions in one season if they are planted in the fall or very early spring.

  6. A popular heirloom, very easy to grow and much more certain to bulb than regular onions. Each set yields a cluster of 8 to 12 medium-sized, long-keeping yellow onions that are mild and sweet flavored.

  7. 7 paź 2014 · Potato onion is a common name for a type of multiplying onion. They’re also known as hill onions, mother onions, or pregnant onions. One bulb can produce up to 8 or more onions.

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