Understanding Onion Growth Phases (2024)

An article byTravis KeyfromLazy Dog Farm

Onions are one of the easiest crops to grow in the backyard garden once you understand how they grow and what types you should be planting in your growing zone. This blog and the next few blogs will be addressing some of the more misunderstood details about the types of onions and how they grow. Before we talk about onion growing tips and how to maximize your harvest, I think it’s important to explain how an onion grows. Once you understand the distinct growing phases of an onion, you’ll be well on your way to growing big onions every year in your backyard garden.

I think it’s important to note that this discussion refers to bulbing onions — the kind that you would buy in a bag at the grocery store. These growing phases and growing tips don’t apply to bunching onions (also known as spring onions), Egyptian walking onions, or multiplying onions.

How Many Growth Phases Do Onions Have?

Depending on what you read, onions have two or three distinct growing phases. These would include the vegetative phase, the bulbing phase, and the flowering phase. In most cases you’ll want to harvest onions prior to any flowering or seed head production, so I often don’t mention the flowering phase when talking about growing onions in a home garden. This phase would only be beneficial if you were wanting to save onion seeds from the bloom so that you could replant them the following year. As such, we’ll primarily talk about the vegetative and bulbing phases below.

Understanding Onion Growth Phases (1)

The Vegetative Growth Phase of Onions

Once an onion seedling emerges from the soil, it will begin to produce green leaves. These leaves will elongate and thicken during the vegetative phase. New leaves will also continually form throughout this growing stage. The onion stem may thicken during the vegetative phase, but there will be no evident bulb formation while the onion plant is in this phase.

Each leaf that forms will represent a ring on the onion bulb that eventually develops during the bulbing phase. Onions will typically produce 8-12 leaves throughout the vegetative phase, but this can vary slightly depending on the quality of the soil, fertility, and growing conditions. Some of the younger leaves will tend to dry and wither as the onion plant grows, so it’s not likely that you’ll see all 12 leaves on an onion plant at any given time.

As a backyard gardener your goal should be to maximize the green growth on the onion plant during the vegetative phase. The more leaves you have and the larger those leaves are, the more energy the plant will be able to generate in the bulbing phase. I recommend never trimming the tops of bulbing onions. Doing this will compromise the leaves and likely result in a smaller bulb during the bulbing phase.

It’s also important to feed and water your onions well during this phase of leaf production. As we’ll discuss more in future blogs, onions are heavy feeders. This means that they like plenty of water and especially nitrogen during this vegetative phase. Feed them frequently with a biologically active fertilizer like AgroThrive General Purpose to keep them happy. The more vegetation the onion plant produces, the larger the eventual bulb will be.

Understanding Onion Growth Phases (2)

The Bulbing Growth Phase of Onions

While the vegetative phase is simple to understand, the bulbing phase is a little more complex and will differ depending on where you live. The initiation of the bulbing phase is easy to identify because you’ll see the soil start to crack around the base of the onion plants. This is in response to the bulb enlarging and pushing soil out the way to make room for the enlarging bulb. When the bulbing phase begins, the onion plant is no longer producing green leaves. It is now devoting most of its energy into producing the large bulb that you’ll eventually harvest.

The bulbing phase in onions is triggered by day length or the number of sunlight hours in each day. This obviously varies depending on where you live. During the winter months, the northern part of the country will have shorter days as compared the southern states. But during the summer months, the northern states will have longer days compared to the south. As such there are three distinct categories of bulbing onion varieties — short-day, intermediate-day, and long-day.

Short-day onion varieties will be initiate bulbing when the sunlight hours per day reaches 11-12 hours in the late winter or early spring months. These onions should only be grown in the southern states. They perform best when planted in the fall and overwintered for a late spring harvest. This allows the southern grower to maximize leaf formation and growth in the vegetative phase throughout the mild winter. The result is a large, delicious onion that is formed in the bulbing phase.

Intermediate-day onion varieties begin to bulb when the sunlight hours per day reaches 13-14 hours in the late spring or early summer months. These varieties work well for those living in the middle of the country. They’re usually planted in late winter or early spring and harvested in the early summer months.

Long-day onion varieties will start to bulb when the sunlight hours per day reaches 15-16 hours per day. These varieties should be grown by gardeners in the northern states and are usually planted in early spring once the risk of freezing temperatures has passed. They’ll then be harvested in the mid to late summer months depending on how far north you are.

If you plant the wrong “day-length” type for your area, you likely won’t produce a very large onion or may not produce a bulb at all. If you plant a short-day onion in the northern states, the sunlight hours per day will already be near or more than 11-12 hours a day by the time the weather allows you to plant. As such, the onion plant wouldn’t spend much time in the vegetative phase and would quickly start bulbing. Because there wouldn’t be much vegetation on the plant, the onion bulb would be small and underwhelming.

If you plant a long-day onion in the southern states, it may never bulb at all. As mentioned above, southern states don’t receive as much sunlight per day as northern states in the summer months. Depending on how far south you live, you may never experience the 15-16 hours of sunlight per day required to initiate bulbing in the long-day onion varieties. As a result, you’ll just have an onion plant with a bunch of leaves but no bulb.

If you live on the border of the short-day and intermediate-day boundaries indicated in the figure above, you can likely plant either type. Similarly, if you live on the border of the intermediate-day and long-day boundaries, you can probably grow either and be successful. But if you live in the deep south, you should stick with short-day varieties. And if you live in the far north, you should only grow long-day varieties.

Understanding Onion Growth Phases (3)

Using the Onion Growth Phases to Your Advantage

Now that you understand the two distinct growing phases of an onion and how they differ depending on your latitude, you can now use this information to select the right varieties for your area. When buying onion seeds or plants, always make sure you know whether you are buying a short-day, intermediate-day, or a long-day variety. On the following blog, we’ll dig deeper into the types, colors, and shapes of onions that you can grow in your backyard garden.

Thousands of gardeners have been tuning in toThe Lazy Dog Farm YouTube channelwhere Travis covers a variety topics ranging from how to successfully start seedlings to how to make a flavorful hotsauce that packs a punch. Accompanied by his wife Brooklyn and their two boys, the gardens on their 2 acre homestead in southwest Georgia are always filled with a wide variety of vegetables that are enjoyed fresh or preserved for later.

Understanding Onion Growth Phases (2024)

FAQs

What are the growth stages of onions? ›

How Many Growth Phases Do Onions Have? Depending on what you read, onions have two or three distinct growing phases. These would include the vegetative phase, the bulbing phase, and the flowering phase.

Can I cut the tops off my onions while they are still growing? ›

There's quite a bit of misinformation online about cutting onion tops to produce a larger onion. We highly recommend not cutting your onion tops if you want to produce large onions. The onion tops are necessary for the plant to generate energy to make a large bulb during the bulbing phase.

How long does it take for onions to grow in Dreamlight Valley? ›

Vegetable
IngredientLocation (Goofy's Stall)How Long It Takes To Grow
OnionForest of Valor1 hour 15 minutes
PotatoForgotten Lands35 minutes
PumpkinForgotten Lands4 hours
SpinachGlade of Trust1 hour
11 more rows
Apr 21, 2023

Why are my onions not forming bulbs? ›

One common reason why onions may not form bulbs is if the wrong variety is grown. Make sure to sow a bulb onion, not a bunching onion. In addition, different varieties of onions are more suited to cool or warm climates.

How long does it take for onions to fully grow? ›

Onion sets are immature bulbs that are 3/4 inches in diameter and smaller. You can usually find these in bags of 100 in the spring—plus, they are easy to grow. "You just open the bag and plant each set an inch deep and you're done," says Jabbour. Most onion sets take between 90 to 100 days to mature to full-size bulbs.

What do onions look like when they are done growing? ›

For full-sized bulbs, let onions grow and mature. They are ready to harvest when the bulbs are big and the tops begin to turn yellow and fall over.

Where is Elsa's secret chest? ›

After she eats them, she remembers a chest she buried near the Ice Cavern. Dig out the spot just behind the large Ice Shard to the left of the Ice Cavern entrance to find a Purple Crest and Arendellian Extra-Pickled Herring.

What is the best crop to grow and sell in Dreamlight Valley? ›

Despite a 240-minute grow time, Pumpkins offer the most Profits Per Harvest, coming in at 389 Star Coins profit for every Pumpkin harvested.

How to make crops grow faster in Dreamlight Valley? ›

If you want to make the most of your time growing crops in a specific biome gives you an advantage. You can always tell which crops will grow better in a certain biome, because a little triangle pointing upward will appear over whatever seeds benefit from growing in the area in which you're planting.

What triggers onions to bulb? ›

Since the onion is a cool weather crop, foliage development requires a temperature of 45-60º and bulb formation requires a temperature requirement of 60-75º for optimum bulb size. In addition to temperature, bulbing is initiated when the daylight length reaches the number of hours critical for that variety.

What is the best fertilizer for onions? ›

Onions require a high source of nitrogen. A nitrogen-based fertilizer (ammonium sulfate or ammonium nitrate) should be applied at the rate of one cup per twenty feet of row. The first application should be about three weeks after planting and then continue with applications every 2 to 3 weeks.

What are the three stages of onion? ›

bulbs have high water content and display an active life after harvesting. Onions are characterized by three major periods: rest, dormancy, and regrowth (sprouting), as shown in Fig.

What is the crop rotation for onions? ›

Crop rotation

After growing onions in one place in the bed, you should not grow onion plants or other allium plants there again the very next year. You should take a cultivation break of 3 - 4 years. Otherwise you will encourage the colonization of pests or diseases.

Can you eat onions at any stage of growth? ›

You may harvest and eat onions at any phase of growth. However, they will be larger if left until they have finished growing, and they will store better. Generally it takes approximately 100 to 120 days for onions to reach maturity in our area.

What is the flowering stage of an onion? ›

Most studies on the effects of storage temperature on inflorescence initiation in onion have shown that the optimum temperature for flowering is in a range between 5℃ to 13℃C for 90 to 120 days and bolting resistant varieties require a longer cold stimulus (154 - 185 days) in comparison to normal spring sown cultivars.

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