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Allium (Species) Hairy Garlic in the GardenTags plant encyclopedia

Allium subhirsutum

 

Allium (Species) Hairy Garlic

Garlic, a member of the onion family, is an easy crop to grow, provided it has a sunny site, and fertile, well-drained soil. Originally from the Mediterranean, this Allium variety has long narrow green leaves with tiny hairs along the edges, hence the name. The leaves smell of onion when crushed or bruised. Clusters of small white six petalled flowers with pink stripes appear in Spring.

Contributed by @justin

 
plant Features
  • Allium (Species) Hairy Garlic likes full sun

    Full sun

  • Allium (Species) Hairy Garlic likes occasional watering

    Occasional watering

  • Allium (Species) Hairy Garlic is frost hardy: 23f (-5°c)

    Frost Hardy: 23F (-5°C)

  • Allium (Species) Hairy Garlic likes free draining and fertile

    Free draining and fertile

 
plant information

Common name

Allium (Species) Hairy Garlic

Latin name

Allium subhirsutum

type

Vegetable

family

Amaryllidaceae

ph

6.5 - 8.0 Acid - Neutral

  • Light

    Allium (Species) Hairy Garlic likes full sun

    Full sun

  • Frost

    Allium (Species) Hairy Garlic is frost hardy: 23f (-5°c)

    Frost Hardy: 23F (-5°C)

  • Soil

    Allium (Species) Hairy Garlic likes free draining and fertile

    Free draining and fertile

  • Water

    Allium (Species) Hairy Garlic likes occasional watering

    Occasional watering

Plant & bloom calendar

  •  
    Best time to plant
  •  
    When to harvest

full grown dimensions

The size of a fully grown Allium (Species) Hairy Garlic is 0.10meters x 0.50meters 0.10 M 0.50 M

Allium subhirsutum

Garlic, a member of the onion family, is an easy crop to grow, provided it has a sunny site, and fertile, well-drained soil. Originally from the Mediterranean, this Allium variety has long narrow green leaves with tiny hairs along the edges, hence the name. The leaves smell of onion when crushed or bruised. Clusters of small white six petalled flowers with pink stripes appear in Spring.


Planting

From Late Autumn TO Early Spring

Garlic is planted from bulb segments (cloves), so break up the bulb carefully into individual cloves prior to planting, and then plant the cloves pointed end up with the tips 1" (2.5 cms) below the soil surface, in fertile, dry soil, in a sunny site. Plant 6" (15 cmc) apart, with 1' (30 cms) between rows. Allow 15cm (6in) between individual cloves and 30cm (1ft) between rows. Plant the cloves so the tips are 2.5cm (1in) below soil surface. Deeper planting can encourage better yields on light soils, but do not plant deeply on heavy soils. After planting, garlic needs a cool, one- to two-month period at temperatures of 0-10°C (32-50°F) for good bulb development. Planting in late autumn or in early spring (depending on the cultivar) will provide the necessary chilling period.

 
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