December 22, 2024

VIDEO: How to Grow This Amazing Crop For FREE Every Year!


We grow a crop of green onions every year and it’s totally free because we let them self seed. In this episode, I will show you how we keep them contained, healthy, and producing. 

26 thoughts on “VIDEO: How to Grow This Amazing Crop For FREE Every Year!

  1. THANKS LUKE‼️I LOVE your channel❗️You guys may think I’m a strange hippy gardener, but I harvest the Dandelions as they come up in my garden. Yes, they’re heavy feeders with a long root searching for nutrients deep in the soil, however, this makes them an extremely nutritious green. Some call Dandelion a superfood & it’s said to be more nutritious than kale or spinach, yet requires little to NO CARE. With recent drought in New England I never once had to water Dandelions. If you don’t like it raw in salad, it can be dehydrated on a low temp to maintain enzymes & keep it a living food, then store leaves for winter soup OR ground into green powder & added to soup broth or smoothies for added nutrition. Sorry for the rant.

  2. I didn't even buy my first round of green onion seed – I planted the chopped off root ends from a bunch we bought from the store and ate, and they all grew huge and went to seed the next spring.

  3. I have a patch with 6-10 onion plants that I never planted nor have any clue where they came from since I never had onions other than some green onions in a different area. I plan to let them go through the cycle and see what happens.

  4. I thought scallions / bunching onions were perennial, or at least the variety I've been growing is supposed to be perennial. I suppose it depends whether you let them go to seed, as this takes a lot of energy out of the plant.

  5. We do the same thing for chives. Some of those young 1yr old green onions that you are thinning should be cut up and put into the dehydrator for use in the dead of winter when you cannot go out and harvest from the garden. I give excess fresh and dried to neighbors. We also use a bit of colored string tied lightly around the stalks of the plants that we want to harvest the seed pods. The seed is then given as gifts at Christmas to fellow gardeners or new beginners. Thanks for your channel!

  6. BACK in the day they used the extra seed to grow close and make onions sets..aka tiny bulbs..to plant next year..i got a bowl full waiting to out out next week….

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