Gardening Magazine

Onion "Long Red Florence"

By Mwillis
Today I harvested my "Long Red Florence" onions. Here is their story...
Onion
They were sown in John Innes No.1 compost in little 3-inch pots, about 5 or 6 seeds to a pot, on February 4th (coincidentally, the first seeds I sowed this year).
Onion
The pots were initially kept in one of my little plastic mini-greenhouses.
Onion
When I felt they were big enough to be transplanted, I put them in one of my raised beds, keeping the 5 or 6 seedlings together in a clump. This was on 5th April.
Onion

Onion

Bed prepared for Leeks under grilles at Left. Florence onions in Centre, protected by sticks. "Sturon" onion sets at Right.


This is 24th May, with the onions now about the thickness of a pencil.
Onion

This is 2nd July, with the onions showing definite signs of bulbing-up.
Onion

11th July - getting quite fat now.
Onion

23rd July. Some of them have developed a very deep purple colouring. They look nearly ready.
Onion

28th July. I picked a couple to test what they were like.
Onion

The test onions were used in two different salads and proved to be very nice indeed - lovely and sweet and not at all harsh when eaten raw.
Onion

So here we are today, 31st July, and I have picked all the remainder of them - a further 31 onions.
Onion

The weather forecast says that today and tomorrow will be mainly sunny for us, so the onions will be outside for a while, but I have rigged up a drying-rack in the garage, where I will put them if (when) the rain returns on Wednesday as forecast.
Onion

I think these onions are great. They look stunning, were easy to grow, and (most importantly) taste nice. What's not to like?
Onion

Growing them was very easy. After planting-out it was simply a case of watering every now and then (for instance during the very hot spell in June), and removing the occasional weed. And best of all, none of them bolted - unlike their "Red Baron" cousins!
By the way, some people have commented that these onions look like shallots. Indeed they do, but the difference is this: one onion seed or set produces one onion, whereas one shallot seed or set splits into several separate bulbs. So now you know!

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