This is our second year growing garlic. We used cloves from the first year’s harvest. We are having fun, but don’t exactly know what we are doing! We plant the cloves, cover with dead leaves/cardboard for the winter, uncover in the spring, and wait to harvest scapes and bulbs. That’s it.

What are your garlic growing tips/strategies? Do you feed your bulbs at any particular time?

  • Anti-Antidote
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    1 year ago

    Hey! I’ve been growing garlic with my family for years now and recently compiled our findings. Sorry for the formatting, I’m on mobile and am copying this from my notes.

    EDIT: Fixed formatting


    Garlic

    Garlic is an annual, cold hardy allium that requires full sun. Make sure to plant in well-draining, moisture retentive sandy loam. A mixture of peat moss and cow manure does excellently, and a thick layer of mulch or other slow-decomposing matter under your soil layer will provide long-term nutrients to your crop.

    When to Plant

    Hardneck garlic does best when planted around 60 days before the first frost of the fall so that it can experience a “dormancy” period of colder weather. By planting in the fall, the garlic has time to develop healthy roots before the temps drop and the ground freezes, but not enough time to start sending top growth up.

    Softneck garlic can be overwintered in zones 7 and warmer, but for colder climates must be planted in the spring as it is not as cold hardy.

    Planting

    High nitrogen = more bulb big

    Immediately before planting, work a couple tablespoons of 5-10-10 complete fertilizer, bone meal, or fish meal into the soil, several inches below where the base of the garlic cloves will sit.

    Select large, healthy cloves that are free of disease. The larger the clove, the healthier and bigger the resulting bulb will be the following summer. Break apart the cloves from their bulbs a few days before planting, but make sure to keep the papery husk on each individual clove.

    To prevent weeds from growing, cover the entire bed with a layer of plastic landscaping fabric and anchor it at the edges. In spots where a bulb will be planted, use a blowtorch to melt a hole in the fabric about 3 inches in diameter.

    Cloves should be planted in rows spaced 6 to 12 inches apart, with cloves about 4-8 inches apart. Plant cloves 2 inches deep in their upright position (with the wider root side facing down and the pointed end facing up).

    After everything’s been planted, mulch the garlic beds heavily with straw or leaves to ensure proper overwintering. In the spring, the mulch should be mostly removed around two weeks after the last frost, leaving only a thin layer of about an inch to keep weeds under control.

    Maintenance

    Keep garlic beds heavily weeded. Garlic does not do well with competition, and nutrient availability will directly contribute to bulb size.

    As garlic shoots grow, they will send up scapes with a growing flower bulb at the end. Allow these to grow until they first begin to curl, then prune them just above the highest leaf on the shoot. This prevents the garlic from using too much energy trying to flower and allows the bulb to grow larger.

    Fertilize the garlic using blood meal, pelleted chicken manure, or a synthetic source of nitrogen such as a pelleted fertilizer in early spring and again just before the bulbs begin to well in response to lengthening daylight (usually early May). Repeat if the leaves begin to yellow.

    Water every 3 to 5 days during bulbing (mid-May through June). As mid-June approaches, taper off watering.

    Harvest

    The right time to harvest from fall plantings will range from late June to August. In general, the clue is to look for yellowing foliage, but this isn’t the case for all garlic varieties. For hardneck varieties, harvest when the bottom two leaves have turned brown, but most of the plant is still green. For softneck varieties, harvest when the tops of the shoots flop over. Make sure that the soil is not too wet when harvesting.

    Before digging up your whole crop, it’s a good idea to sample one bulb. Lift a bulb to see if the crop is ready. It’s recommended to dig up a bulb before the tops are completely yellow (in late June or early July) as some garlic types will be ready earlier.

    If pulled too early, the papery skin surrounding the bulb will be thin and easily disintegrate. If left in the ground too long, the bulbs will sometimes split apart. The skin may also split, which exposes the bulbs to disease and will affect their longevity in storage.

    To harvest, carefully dig up the bulbs using a garden fork (don’t pull or yank the stems up by hand). Avoid damaging the roots or root-plate (where they attach to the bulb). Lift the plants and carefully brush off surplus soil, but do not remove any foliage or roots before putting them to dry thoroughly.

    Curing and Storage

    Let garlic cure in an airy, shady, dry spot for about 2 weeks. Hang them upside down on a string in bunches of 4 to 6 or leave them to dry on a homemade rack made from chicken wire stretched over posts. Make sure all sides get good air circulation.

    After a few weeks, the garlic should be totally dry and ready to store. The bulbs are done curing and ready to store when the wrappers are dry and papery and the roots are dry. The root crown should be hard, and the cloves should be able to be cracked apart easily.

    Once the bulbs are dry, brush off any dirt, remove only the dirtiest wrappers, trim the roots down to 1/4", and cut off the tops to 1 to 2 inches.

    Bulbs should be stored in a cool, dark, dry place (around 55°) and can be kept in the same way for several months. Don’t store bulbs in your basement if it’s humid. Don’t store them in your fridge either, as it will be too cold and too humid.

    Make sure to set aside your biggest, best-formed bulbs for planting again in the fall. Remember, the better the bulbs you plant, the better the bulbs you harvest.

    Troubleshooting

    Red and white spots on leaves: this can be a sign of garlic rust, which is a fungal disease that affects garlic and other alliums. It does not affect the taste of safety of the harvested bulb, but it does limit bulb growth (especially if the infection started early in the season). Try to catch this early and cut off any afflicted leaves before it spreads too far.

    Notes

    Garlic should be planted on a 4-year crop rotation if possible to prevent the likelihood of fungal infections. If this isn’t possible, you can discourage some fungal infections from taking hold by spacing your garlic further apart. Additionally, make sure to minimize sources of fungal spores like dead leaves and spent plants.

    Nematodes love eating alliums and nightshades, so if you encounter them eating your crop make sure to avoid planting them in the same spot for a few years to starve them out.

    Grower’s Log

    2023 Harvest

    Bulbs were on the small side this year. I think this is due to a number of timing factors (late planting, next to no weeding, late to cutting scapes) as well as no effort to fertilize during the growing season. Next year I will try to be more attentive to both of these things. Processing for curing was also made difficult due to being late to harvest, so most of the leaves were too dry to get a single layer off the bulb.

    I also found weird white dots in the soil under one corner of the bed - hoping this isn’t anything I need to worry about for in the future.


    References

    • @[email protected]
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      fedilink
      31 year ago

      I agree with most of this, but I would say compost should play a bigger role. It loosened up and improved the soil over the winter and gave my bulbs a chance to expand in a dense clay soil that otherwise would have really restricted growth. Some of my bulbs really reached deeper into the soil than I expected, given severe drought and the original clay soil, and I noticed the soil structure around them got more friable below the deepest part of the root plate.

      • Anti-Antidote
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        21 year ago

        Thanks for the feedback, I’ll have to amend my notes then. Do you have any references I can draw from?

  • @KindaLost
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    31 year ago

    So many! Did some not split into multiple cloves? Its hard to tell from the photo.

    I only grew garlic once by accident. I planted a couple of cloves in a pot and forgot about them the plant part grew and died without me noticing and when I dumped the dirt into a new pot to reuse I found a few big bulbs of garlic. It was a big surprise and I really had to think back to how they got there. But due to the accidental nature of how they came to be I cant say I have any advice.

  • @[email protected]
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    fedilink
    21 year ago

    I never fed the garlic specifically, but just prepared the whole garden with finished compost. We planted grocery store garlic cloves and seed garlic from an existing local patch. They seem to really like coffee grounds.

    • Anti-Antidote
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      21 year ago

      Definitely! Garlic prefers acidic soil (around 6.5 pH) so adding coffee grounds will definitely help, especially if the soil in your area is basic

      • @[email protected]
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        fedilink
        11 year ago

        I have a roughly neutral pH here, I just add coffee grounds to loosen things up and force my little invertebrate minions to stay near the surface and chew up the clay pasture soil for me. We’ve seen a huge increase in worm castings from as deep as 30 inches below the surface this year. Very satisfying. They don’t care about drought, they farm while I sleep in!

        • Anti-Antidote
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          21 year ago

          Nice! I’m based near Michigan so our soil is fairly loamy anyway, but we grow out garlic in raised beds so that doesn’t really matter for us. Sure is a pain to set up though