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When planting garlic, know your climate unless you are willing to wait several years until your chosen variety adapts to your location. Each clove you plant functions as a seed, and will produce one plant with one bulb. This bulb may produce up to twenty cloves. Garlic is of the allium family. From this family also come your leeks, onions, and shallots.
Garlic Varieties There are two garlic types: the softneck and the hardnecks. The softnecks (Silverskin, Artichoke) are more adjustable to different climates and store better. The hardnecks (Porcelain, Purple Stripe, Rocamboles) though offering larger but fewer bulbs, have shorter shelf lives as they have few or no outer wrappers. These varieties are broken down into hundreds of different sub-varieties. The ones you usually see in supermarkets are the softnecks. Cultivation methods for all these garlic varieties will somewhat vary as they will depend on where you live. Propagation The usual method is propagation from cloves or bulblets comprising the bulb. Each bulb contains about twelve or more cloves, which become your “seeds.” Propagation by garlic’s real seed is not popular, as it is very seldom that a seed can produce a plant. Such plant may also take several years to produce a garlic, if at all. Planting Garlic in Containers If you are growing your garlic in containers, mid-October’s temperature can help the plant to a good start, and the cold weather can also help in producing larger bulbs and more cloves.
More on Planting Garlic
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