digitS'
Garden Master
According to the dictionary that I use, serendipity means to make "fortunate discoveries by accident." Things like this happen to gardeners, probably quite a lot - How about to you??
I grow onions from sets, seeds, and plants.
The Dixondale Farms onion catalog has just arrived. It was a relief to find that they still carry Sterling onions! Sterling was a new introduction last year and I looked HARD at the pictures but went for Walla Walla, Red Mars, and leeks as I've done before. Walla Walla seed had also been planted in my little greenhouse for setting out but I decided to order the other 2 even tho' I started leeks from seed myself in past years.
Imagine my disappointment when the day came to set out the plants and there were no leeks - instead, they'd sent me a 3rd bunch of onions. Well, the disappointment continues. For the 1st time in a few years, we had no leeks for autumn soup and no leeks to enjoy out of the fridge, right now.
However . . . we have a nice white onion .
I've grown a few of the onions that Dixondale offers, either as plants from them or from seed. Nothing tops Walla Walla to my way of thinking but those onions are long gone now :/. I'm surprised that the catalog says they only make it 1 month in storage. We got them thru October from harvest in early August.
I grew some Candy onions, again - honestly, I think the appeal is mostly in the name altho' I do appreciate how quickly they develop. There weren't many and there was none that went into storage. They were used with the Utahs, another fine sweet onion but not a storage type. There's a little basket of yellow onions grown from sets but most of those were used as early scallions . . . so mostly, I'm left with the Sterlings and that's just fine!
Sterling shows no indication right now that they will spoil or sprout anytime soon and they taste, a little pungent but just fine! Serendipity -- I made a good discovery quite by accident .
Steve
I grow onions from sets, seeds, and plants.
The Dixondale Farms onion catalog has just arrived. It was a relief to find that they still carry Sterling onions! Sterling was a new introduction last year and I looked HARD at the pictures but went for Walla Walla, Red Mars, and leeks as I've done before. Walla Walla seed had also been planted in my little greenhouse for setting out but I decided to order the other 2 even tho' I started leeks from seed myself in past years.
Imagine my disappointment when the day came to set out the plants and there were no leeks - instead, they'd sent me a 3rd bunch of onions. Well, the disappointment continues. For the 1st time in a few years, we had no leeks for autumn soup and no leeks to enjoy out of the fridge, right now.
However . . . we have a nice white onion .
I've grown a few of the onions that Dixondale offers, either as plants from them or from seed. Nothing tops Walla Walla to my way of thinking but those onions are long gone now :/. I'm surprised that the catalog says they only make it 1 month in storage. We got them thru October from harvest in early August.
I grew some Candy onions, again - honestly, I think the appeal is mostly in the name altho' I do appreciate how quickly they develop. There weren't many and there was none that went into storage. They were used with the Utahs, another fine sweet onion but not a storage type. There's a little basket of yellow onions grown from sets but most of those were used as early scallions . . . so mostly, I'm left with the Sterlings and that's just fine!
Sterling shows no indication right now that they will spoil or sprout anytime soon and they taste, a little pungent but just fine! Serendipity -- I made a good discovery quite by accident .
Steve