Published Wednesday, August 5, 2009, OK personal/derivative use; link lovethatimage.artsquadgraphics.com.
Garlic harvest, for free
This is one of my favorite garden tips.
When cooking, especially in the cold winter months when you make lots of stews and such, save those stubby bits cut off of the bottom of the garlic cloves. Really, those teensy little things! Go outside and poke them into your vegetable bed, maybe an inch under the ground. If you can, put it with the cut side up. It will grow, I swear, into a plant, and in July after the green tops wither you will have a whole head of garlic! No need to buy special “seed” garlic and waste it by putting the cloves into the ground without using them first.
I learned this after observing that the sliced off root ends of onions sometimes sprouted in the compost pile. I moved that first plant into my garden, and I’ve been planting onion bottoms and watching them turn into big plants ever since. But this is the first time I thought to try it with garlic. Look what I dug up a week or so ago! And these two dozen plants grew in maybe a square foot and a half of space, the plants just a few inches apart.
Think Green Thursday is a site about living more “greenly.” To me, growing your own food is one of the greenest things you can do.
I’m always composting that stuff… I’ve had squash and cataloupe grow from some of the seeds that lived to tell me about it.
I’ll tell my husband this little secret — see what happens.
things are different on our side of the mountains, tho. It might just wither.
What a clever tip! I had no idea, but will definitely give this a try!
What a marvelous idea! And so logical. Don’t know why I never thought of it. Thanks.
Sara, great post! Didn’t get my Think Green Thursday up today because I’m asking for the home addresses of people who want a copy of The Ruby Tuesday little RED lighthouse. Send yours and I’ll send you a postcard… 🙂
Great tips! Thanks, I will try growing mine …heee…
Good luck to everyone and I hope you try it! Let me know if it works, OK? I’ll be happy to answer questions if I can.
Sara
What a great tip!
That looks like a great garlic harvest… mmmmmmm….
I do use a lot of garlic and certainly this is a valuable lesson! Thanks for the tip!