How to plant onions with seeds

Everyone knows that onions can be planted in two ways - seeds and small onions (the so-called garbage). Since onions are a biennial plant, in the first year the seeds produce not large heads, but small onions (that same garbage), by planting which, next year, you will get a full-fledged onion harvest. However, there are many ways to get ready-to-eat onions from seeds in just one year. To do this, for example, you can replant it, shortening part of the fibrous root system. Or create ideal conditions for full ripening - greenhouses, greenhouses, special soil, timely watering, etc.

But in order to harvest, onions must first be planted. How to plant onions with seeds to provide them with ideal conditions for germination and ripening, read on. Before planting, onion seeds do not need any preparatory processes - they do not need to be soaked or germinated. However, given the small size of each seed, many gardeners resort to all sorts of tricks to save seeds and not waste them when planting (then there will be no need to waste time thinning the beds). To do this, you can stick the seeds onto a rolled out roll of modern toilet paper. Roll out the roll, apply a thin strip of PVA glue on it and glue the onion seeds at a distance of 5-7 cm from each other. This will significantly save time when landing.

You need to plant onions in shallow grooves, which are made using a regular garden sap. Groove depth - up to 7 cm.You need to plant the seeds at a distance of 5-7-9 cm from each other (or simply unroll toilet paper with the seeds glued to it along the groove), water it and sprinkle it with soil.