Evergreen Bunching - Onion Seeds

SKU: VON103
Open-Pollinated
Heirloom
Price:$4.35
Choose size

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Evergreen Bunching (Welsh onion) never bulbs—just keeps sending up mild, hollow stems you can snip all season. Perennial in mild zones, it overwinters and regrows early.

A source of vitamin C and sulfur compounds, it’s a kitchen staple for stir-fries, omelets, and garnishes. Sow thick, divide clumps, and harvest as needed. If you hate running out of scallions, plant a row of Evergreens and forget the grocery store bunches.

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Unopened items may be returned within 30 days of delivery. If an order arrives damaged, incomplete, or incorrect, please contact us so we can make it right.

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We stand behind every packet we sell. Our seeds are carefully selected, tested for germination, untreated, and guaranteed to be true to variety.

Your seeds are covered for one year from the date of purchase. If they fail to germinate under reasonable growing conditions, arrive damaged, or do not grow true to type, contact us and we’ll make it right with a replacement, store credit, or refund.

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Start seed indoors 6–8 weeks before transplanting into the garden. Optimum soil temperature for seed germination is 65–70°F. Transplant to the garden about 2–4 weeks before your average last frost. If seedlings begin to tip over, trim tops to about 3”. Bunching onions can also be direct sown from early spring into midsummer. Plant in full sun and fertile, well-drained soil, and keep evenly watered and weed free for best growth. Established clumps may be divided to produce additional plants. Harvest young or at full size as needed.

Scientific name: allium fistulosum
Days to maturity: 60-80 from transplant
Seed depth: 1/4-1/2"
Days to sprout: 7-12
Plant spacing: 2-4"
Row spacing: 12-18"
Light requirements: sunny
Plant height: 10-16"
Life cycle: biennial
Frost hardy: yes

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NON-GMO

Open-pollinated varieties for home gardens & seed saving

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Safe seed, free from chemical treatments

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Growing Guide

For thousands of years, onions have followed people from garden to kitchen, adding depth and sweetness to meals made from the simplest ingredients. Beneath their upright green leaves, each bulb is built slowly, one fleshy layer at a time.

Onions may be grown as scallions, small fresh bulbs, large storage onions, or sweet slicing types. Their success depends on choosing a variety suited to local day length, establishing strong leafy growth early, and allowing the bulbs to mature as the days lengthen.

Start onion seeds indoors about 10–12 weeks before the expected last spring frost. Transplant outdoors as soon as the soil can be worked and temperatures are consistently cool but not severely cold.

Onions tolerate light frost and grow best when established early. Bulbing begins in response to day length, so choose short-day, intermediate-day, or long-day varieties suited to your latitude. Most northern gardens require long-day onions.

Sow seeds about ¼ inch deep and keep the mix evenly moist. Provide bright light after emergence. When seedlings reach several inches tall, their tops may be trimmed lightly to keep them upright and manageable.

Harden seedlings gradually before planting them 1–2 inches deep. Space onions about 3–4 inches apart for mature bulbs or closer for scallions, with rows 12–18 inches apart. Onion sets are easy to plant, but seed-grown transplants offer a wider choice of varieties and often produce larger bulbs.

Choose a site with full sun and loose, well-drained soil enriched with finished compost. Onions have shallow roots and grow poorly when crowded by weeds or planted in compacted ground.

Keep the soil evenly moist while leaves and bulbs are developing. Mulch lightly to conserve moisture and suppress weeds, but avoid burying the bulbs as they enlarge. Maintain balanced fertility early in the season, then avoid pushing fresh leafy growth as the crop approaches maturity.

Harvest scallions whenever the stems reach a useful size. Bulbing onions are ready when the necks soften and roughly half to three-quarters of the tops naturally bend over.

Lift the bulbs during dry weather and cure them in a warm, shaded, well-ventilated place until the outer skins are papery and the necks are completely dry. Trim the roots and tops after curing. Store only firm, undamaged bulbs in a cool, dark place with good airflow. Proper curing greatly extends storage life.

Onions provide fiber, vitamin C, folate, potassium, and sulfur-containing compounds responsible for their familiar aroma and flavor. Red onions also contain anthocyanins, while many varieties contain the flavonoid quercetin.

Use onions raw, roasted, grilled, pickled, sautéed, or slowly cooked until sweet and deeply browned. The green tops of young onions are also edible and useful as a fresh garnish.

Onion thrips may leave pale streaks or silvery patches on the leaves, while onion maggots can damage roots and bulbs. Rotate onions and related crops, remove cull bulbs and diseased plants, control nearby weeds, and avoid planting onions repeatedly in the same bed.

Good drainage, generous airflow, and watering near the soil help reduce fungal and bacterial diseases. Inspect plants regularly and remove any bulbs that become soft, discolored, or foul-smelling. Thrips are a recognized pest of onions and several related vegetable crops. 

Onions are biennial and insect-pollinated. They usually form bulbs during the first season, survive a period of winter cold, and flower the following year. Different varieties of common onion, Allium cepa, can cross with one another.

Select several healthy, true-to-type bulbs and store them cool, dry, and frost-free through winter where they cannot remain safely in the ground. Replant in spring and allow the round flower heads to mature.

When the seed heads become dry and black seeds begin to show, cut them into paper bags and finish drying under cover. Rub the heads apart, remove the chaff, and store the thoroughly dry seed in a cool, dark place. Onion seed loses vigor faster than many vegetable seeds, so fresh seed is best.

  • Choose onion varieties according to local day length.
  • Keep beds weed-free while plants are small.
  • Harvest scallions from crowded rows as a form of thinning.
  • Stop regular watering as the tops begin to fall.
  • Cure bulbs thoroughly before storage.