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Pull them up, tie them in bundles of about 5 or 6 to the bunch. Hang them in the garage/carport, laundry room, barn, front porch, under the back deck cover etc. Keep them dry and out of sunlight till the tops are completely dry and crumbly. Snip the tops off about 1/2 inch above the onions and box them up, or leave them hanging till you use them. Some people skip the bunch and dry part, snip the tops off and box them, but they will keep longer if you air dry them for a few weeks.
Am I in my cabin dreaming? Or are you really scheming, to take my ship away from me? You better think about it. I just cant live without it. So please dont take my ship from me!!!
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| Posts: 829 | Location: North Central Texas zone 8. 35 miles North of DFW airport | Registered: February 11, 2002 |    |
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Once they're dry, can they be stored were it freezes? My basement is very damp. My garage is detached from the house, so it sees -10ºF on cold winter days. The house is heated, although I'm considering a small closet by the bathroom may be relatively temperature stable and away from baseboards / wood stove / windows / etc. Not that it's important this year...first time I've tried onions, I have ONE big beauty  Plus a handful of small ones whose tops flopped so I harvested them and will use them up this week.
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Another new onion grower here. Mine went in late and most are still standing tall. (Except one I snitched to eat tonight.  ). So asking around at the farmer's market on Saturday, one lady told me to stamp the greens down. Upon questioning, she said to do that after the seed head forms. Another said forget it, just let them fall over when they're ready. Haven't seen any seed heads yet. Should I? Should I snip them off (like garlic scapes)? I'm not too keen on the stamping thing. Anybody here do that?  BTW -- farmhound, thanks for the drying info!
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| Posts: 3171 | Location: North Dakota 3/4 | Brrrr. Whew! Brrrr. | Registered: August 01, 2006 |    |
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If they are putting up a seed head, they arent gonna be much good. That seed head makes a big hollow stem through the onion. You dont want them to seed. When mine put up a seed head, I pull them right then and eat them. Cause they wont keep. Stress and odd weather conditions make them bolt and seed. Like heavy frost after a warm spell, or excessive heat then a cool spell, then hot again. They think they have lived through 2 seasons and bolt to make babies. Onions should not seed the first year. Let them fall over on their own. Pull and bunch them as they fall over. Also, one more tip. Along about the middle of September, Take some of your big dry onions, put them on some loose soil and cover them with leaves. Not too deep, just dump a few on them to bury them. Then check back about Thanksgiving. You can have fresh green onions with your thanksgiving day dinner. The onions will divide and put up green shoots or sprouts. Mighty tasty and fresh in the early stages of winter.
Am I in my cabin dreaming? Or are you really scheming, to take my ship away from me? You better think about it. I just cant live without it. So please dont take my ship from me!!!
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| Posts: 829 | Location: North Central Texas zone 8. 35 miles North of DFW airport | Registered: February 11, 2002 |    |
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