November 21, 2024

26 thoughts on “VIDEO: How to Plant Late Season Garlic

  1. Oh goody!! Judging by the comments, I'm not the only one who's running behind on the garlic! Lol I was afraid I was too late and would have to wait till Spring.
    Question though: what if my soil isn't top notch? I don't have any compost at the moment.

  2. Congrats on the birth of your son. First year for us growing garlic, but the friend who gave us the garlic tells us now is the best time to plant it here in Iowa Zone 5a. The idea is get it in early enough to allow some root growth, but not so early as to lose too much in top growth during warm spells before the cold settles in.

  3. Some garlic I left in this summer has sent up shoots about 10-12 inches tall. Will it hurt to cut them off for green garlic before they freeze. The cold will kill them anyway. Might as well eat them right?

  4. I just planted my garrlic late last week in Monroe County, MI. I blame you and others I follow for being tardy. I've learned so much about succession planting; extending the season — still crops in the space so late! Finally chopped off the tomato and pepper plants. I love having garlic coming alive while still having photosynthesis from still growing chives, carrots, parsnips, swiss chard and… is that second generation Borage coming up, lol? Add some late planted pea pods and greens (salad., WOW!). I'm waiting a wee bit more before insulating with leaves and sunflower, popcorn stalks since I'd like to to see a bit more cover crop growth first to help out my friends below the surface with some late season root exudates.

    Thanks, Luke and Family!

  5. I planted allium bulbs, the decorative kind, in the middle of winter last year. Granted, it was somewhat warm for a winter day. They still did quite well the following spring.

  6. I just planted my garlic today. The cloves were just getting green tips, so they knew it was time. Last year, I felt like I planted too early, because it was growing too much.

    I was cleaning out tomato plants and I buried some squash vines growing there in trenches in the next bed over. In my gut I felt like it was the day to continue on the bed I just cleaned up and plant the garlic. I peeled back the straw on the surface and loosened the soil. I placed my cloves where I wanted them, and then I dumped a little pile of compost soil on top of each one. Then I pulled the old dry straw back over them and added a good layer more of some wet straw that was still baled, but had been sitting out. I didn't put anything else special on them, but I think they'll do fine. I did not water today, because the compost soil and the bale straw were moist.

    Then I covered the bed with some plastic webbing to keep the birds and squirrels out. Last year I had to replant bulbs constantly, so I am not letting them get away with it this year. 🙂

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