Top
  • Home
  • Shop
  • About
  • Podcast & Blog
  • Our Books
  • Projects
  • Contact
Menu

Seattle Urban Farm Company - Garden trellises and supplies

Street Address
Seattle
206.816.9740
Grow a garden you love

Your Custom Text Here

Seattle Urban Farm Company - Garden trellises and supplies

  • Home
  • Shop
  • About
  • Podcast & Blog
  • Our Books
  • Projects
    • Angeline Apartments
    • Stack House Apartments
    • Urban Fringe Farm
    • Steel + Juniper Terraced Garden
    • Quality Athletics Rooftop Restaurant Garden
    • Mercer Island Urban Farm
    • Four Season Rooftop Farm
    • Queen Anne Steel Raised Bed Garden
    • Bastille Cafe & Bar
    • Magnolia Rooftop Kitchen Garden
    • Sushi Kappo Tamura & Ravish Restaurants
    • Mercer Island Edible Garden
    • Ice Cream Shop Garden at Parfait
    • Terraced Bellevue Vegetable Garden
    • Cedar Raised Beds with Permanent Trellising
    • Meandering Stone Raised Beds
    • Madison Valley Mini-Farm
    • South Seattle Edible Landscape
    • Richmond Beach Vegetable Garden
    • Custom Fence with Grape Trellis
    • Queen Anne Backyard Oasis
    • Tall Raised Beds with Coldframes
    • Suburban Front Yard Farm
    • Capitol Hill Potager Garden
    • Terraced Rock Annual Vegetable Garden
    • Raised Bed Perennial Garden
    • Crops For Clunkers
    • SnoLEAF CASCADIA GBC GREENHOUSE COMPETITION
    • Pike Place Urban Garden
    • Seattle Design Festival Vertical Garden
    • Little Free Library
    • Portfolio
    • Colin McCrate Portfolio
    • Returns
    • Trellis pdf page
  • Contact

Onions & Leeks

January 15, 2009 Colin McCrate
Leeks_Seattle Urban Farm Co.

I just sowed our first onions and leeks. As with so many great gardening traditions (e.g. planting peas on President’s Day, planting chocolate on Valentine’s Day, or planting hot dogs on the Fourth of July), I figured it would help to start the year's first seeds on a holiday: Martin Luther King Jr. Day. As with all great gardening traditions, I got a late start.

At this point, I am sure that you may be asking yourself something like, “Isn’t mid-January a little early to start vegetable seeds?” or maybe “Why am I reading this blog?”

Well, for now please let me attempt to elucidate a few of the wonderful properties of the onion. It should be noted that, the more unique characteristics a plant has, the higher its rating on the "SUFCo Plant Fantastic Index".
That being said, there are many things that make the humble onion a subject worth exploration: First, we should note that the seeds should be kept in the freezer. These seeds have a shorter shelf life than many other vegetable seeds and will likely only be viable for a year if left in your normal seed storage facility (a dark, dry place with zero gravity and free of drastic temperature fluctuations).

Second, onions can now keep the distinct honor of being the earliest sown seed (at least here in the PNW). For this same reason, many home gardeners are apt to grow their onions from sets rather than seeds. It is obviously difficult to get them sown early enough and to have the space and energy to do so.
There are, however, a few advantages to growing from seed.
One, lower cost: seeds are much less expensive than sets or young plants.
Two, the plants will be less likely to bolt: when grown as a set, the onion has already lived for one season and is thus being grown as a biennial, which means its evolutionary programming will tell it to send up a seed stalk ASAP effectively stopping bulb growth.
Three, you have something besides groundhogs to cheer for during February.
So...we sow our onions and leeks in late January, set under a grow light until early spring and get into the ground as soon as we can.

Because onions and leeks take so long to mature, and they are always necessary, we like to plant as many Alliums as we can:
Chives,
Garlic Chives,
Scallions (which are really just non-bulbed onions),
Green Onions (which are really just onions with very tiny bulbs),
Shallots (which are really just onions with slighty larger bulbs)
Leeks,
Sweet White Onions and,
Yellow Storage Onions.
Also an Allium, but requiring its own personal blog, chauffeur, and penthouse apartment: Garlic.

The last fantastic feature that I will mention is “Allium Day-Length Sensitivity”. Different species and varieties have unique light requirements, but bulb growth in most Alliums is triggered by a change in day length. Some types will not start bulbing until days exceed 12 hours, or 13 or 14 or...These differences make certain types more or less suitable to your region. You would want to grow different varieties in Panama (near the equator) than in Alaska (near a moose). Such distinctions are irrelevant to non-bulbing types (leeks, scallions, etc.).
Mostly, I just think that onions are continuously consumed but rarely considered.
In conclusion, at least I now have something to check up on every morning (besides the weather report).

In Annual Vegetables, Winter Tags leeks, onions, seed starting, winter gardening
← VarmintsAnother Word on Seeds →
The Freyr garden trellis by Seattle Urban Farm Co
All Posts By Topic
  • Annual Vegetables 123
  • Podcast 85
  • Spring 36
  • Summer 26
  • Fall 25
  • Garden Planning 23
  • Garden Design 20
  • Harvesting 19
  • Seattle Urban Farm Co 18
  • Winter 18
  • Flowers 14
  • Soil Care 14
  • Crop Planning 11
  • Drip Irrigation 11
  • Organic Pest Control 11
  • Freyr trellis 8
  • Container gardening 7
  • Fruit Trees 7
  • Organic Fertilizer 7
  • The Urban Fringe Farm 7
  • Herbs 6
  • Perennial Vegetables 6
  • Pollinators 5
  • Bees 4
  • Berries 4
  • Crop Storage 4
  • Microgreens 4
  • Farmers 3
  • Our Friends 3
  • Projects 3
  • Chickens 2
  • 2025 events 1
  • Crop Diseases 1
  • In The Press 1
  • Question of the Month 1
  • Seed Starting 1

Our Books:

By McCrate, Colin, Halm, Brad
Order the Freyr trellis today!

Follow Us on Instagram


Featured
DSC_9353.JPG
Apr 10, 2025
How to grow tomatoes
Apr 10, 2025
Apr 10, 2025
Harvesting-homegrown-zucchini-off-of-the-Freyr-vegetable-garden-trellis.jpg
Oct 30, 2023
Crops you'll love to grow on the Freyr trellis!
Oct 30, 2023
Oct 30, 2023
Drip Irrigation How-To, Part 2
Oct 6, 2023
Drip Irrigation How-To, Part 2
Oct 6, 2023
Oct 6, 2023

Contact | Projects | Trellis Guide | About | Podcast | Our Books | Shop | Resources | Wholesale

seattle urban farm company
Address: 4511 Shilshole Ave NW, Seattle, WA 98107
farmers@SeattleUrbanFarmCo.com
206.816.9740

Featured in

Screen Shot 2019-04-11 at 2.13.41 PM.png
Screen Shot 2019-04-11 at 2.13.56 PM.png
Screen Shot 2019-04-11 at 2.14.09 PM.png
Screen Shot 2019-04-11 at 2.18.29 PM.png
Screen Shot 2019-04-11 at 2.20.19 PM.png

© Copyright 2024 – Seattle Urban Farm Company. All Rights Reserved.