Onion

Allium cepa
Amaryllis family (Amaryllidaceae)
4 Years
Propagating
Planting
Harvest
Harvest
J
F
M
A
M
J
J
A
S
O
N
D
1ST YEAR
2ND YEAR
Light requirement
Sunny
Water requirement
Moist
Soil
Medium (loamy)
Nutrient requirement
Medium
Dark germinator
Germination temperature
15 - 20 °C (Degrees Celsius)
Plant distance
10 cm
Row spacing
20 cm
Seeding depth
1.5 cm
Mid of January
Propagating
Mid of January
Weeding
Every week
Beginning of February
Transplanting
Perennial amaryllis plant, which in the first year forms the bulb as a storage organ. Onions include several groups: Leek and spring onions, shallots, summer or kitchen onions, and vegetable onions, all of which differ greatly in growth habit. Furthermore, a distinction is made between "summer", "spring" and "winter" onions. Our usual edible onion is called "winter onion" when it is sown in the fall, cultivated over winter, ripens the next spring and then harvested. Harvesting is a little earlier, but they become very soft and can hardly be stored. Therefore, the edible onion is usually sown or set as a "summer onion" in the spring. Then they can be harvested from July for direct consumption or from August to October for storage. There are also special cultivars of 'Allium cepa' as spring onions. They do not form bulbs, but long, soft stems and grow quickly. Due to the storage organ, the onions are adapted to rainfall fluctuations and drought. Nevertheless, to harvest large onions need a lot of water.
Origin:
Probably from Central Asia
A distinction is made between seed or plug onions. Summer, kitchen and vegetable onions are usually planted as plug onions in the spring. The plug onions are planted only deep enough to be just covered with soil. Sowing in the spring is also possible, and the bulbs are usually slightly smaller when harvested and can be planted as plug onions the following year. It is also possible to grow seedlings in planting trays. Then the seedlings are planted in the bed as soon as the 3rd-4th leaf is visible and as soon as no more severe frost is expected. Harvesting is done as soon as the leaves fold in by themselves and turn yellow and the leaf base dries up. To do this, you should wait for a dry, sunny day and let the bulbs dry out before storing them.
Aubergine / Eggplant
Beetroot
Black salsify
Carrots
Celery (Celeriac / Celery root)
Celery (Celery)
Celery (Leaf celery / Chinese celery)
Chayote
Chili
Coriander / Cilantro
Courgette / Zucchini
Cucumber (African horned cucumber / Kiwano)
Cucumber (Caigua)
Cucumber / Gherkin
Dill
Gartenkürbis - Patisson / Ufo-Kürbis
Knolliger Sauerklee / Oca
Lettuce (Common chicory)
Lettuce (Endive / Escarole / Erisée)
Lettuce (Lamb's lettuce)
Lettuce (Lettuce)
Lettuce (Puntarelle / Cicoria di catalogna / Cicoria asparago)
Lettuce (Radicchio / Italian chicory)
Lettuce (Sugar loaf)
Melon (Sugar melon)
Melon (Watermelon)
Okra
Parsnip
Pepper / Paprika
Savory
Spinach (Summer)
Spinach (Winter)
Strawberry
Tomato (Bush tomato)
Tomato (Cocktail bush tomato)
Tomato (Cocktail Stake Tomato)
Tomato (Stake tomato)
Bean ((Scarlet) runner bean)
Bean (Broad bean / Faba bean / Field bean)
Bean (Dwarf bean)
Bean (Hyacinth bean / Lablab-bean)
Bean (Lima Bean)
Bean (Runner bean)
Broccoli
Broccoli raab / Stem cabbage / Cima di rapa
Brussels sprouts
Cabbage (Cabbage)
Cabbage (Pointed cabbage)
Cabbage (Savoy cabbage)
Cauliflower
Chives
Collard greens (Kale)
Collard greens (Tuscan kale / Dinosaur kale / Palm tree kale)
Garlic chives
Gemüsekohl - Futterkohl
Horseradish
Kaplilien / Kaplauche
Kohlrabi / German turnip / Turnip cabbage
Leeks
Meerkohle
Mizuna / Japanese mustard greens
Napa cabbage / Chinese cabbage
Oil radish / Fodder radish
Pak Choi
Pea
Potato
Radish
Radishes
Raps
Rübsen - Choy Sum / Chinesischer Blütenkohl
Rübsen - Mizuna
Rutabaga / Swedish turnip
Soybean
Sweet potato
Turnip
Wild garlic
Zierlauche
Dry rot of crucifers
Root Rot
Soft rot
Fusarium
Downy mildew
Yellow stripe virus
Thrips
Stem borers
Leaf-miner flies
Onion fly
Wireworms