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Walking Onion ...the
best place to buy Egyptian Walking Onion sets online! Remember
those mysterious onions your grandparents used to have? The ones that are so hard
to find? Well look no more...you found them!
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Egyptian
Walking Onion mini burlap gift sack! Perfect for
when you want to give the gift of Egyptian Walking Onion sets. Click on image
above to order.
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If you like our Egyptian Walking Onions, you'll love our Pet-Paws! New
reduced prices! Pet-Paws are beautiful solid metal keepsakes that
are made directly from your pet's paw print. We also cast bronze Baby-Paws from
your baby's hand or foot! Click on the link to go our Pet-Paws website:
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Simon
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Zuzu
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And now.....
All about
Egyptian Walking Onions! As
their scientific name "Allium proliferum" states, these hardy
little onions are very "prolific." After planting them in your garden
you will have onions every year for years to come! Egyptian Walking Onions are
also called "Tree Onions, Egyptian Tree Onions, Top Onions, Winter Onions,
or Perennial Onions."
The
wonderful walking onion.
Egyptian
Walking Onions are one of the first plants to emerge in the spring. The leaves
poke up through the soil like little green spikes and shoot towards the sky despite
the frost or snow. The blue-green leaves are round and hollow and will grow up
to 3 feet in height. At the the end of a leaf stalk, at the top of the plant,
a cluster of bulblets will begin to grow. These
bulblets are also known as "bulbils" or "sets." Every
Egyptian Walking Onion plant will produce a cluster of sets at the top, hence
the name, "Top Onion," meaning they are top-setting onions.
Egyptian
Walking Onions are top-setting onions.
Egyptian
Walking Onion sets first appear encased in a protective papery tunic which has
a curled tip reminiscent of an elf's shoe. As they grow, this
papery capsule will tear open and
eventually fall off.
Egyptian Walking Onion paper
tunics.
When the sets become heavy enough, they will pull the plant over to the ground.
If the soil conditions are right, the fallen sets will take root and grow new
Egyptian Walking Onion plants, hence the name, "Walking Onion." They
will literally walk across your garden!
Egyptian Walking Onion plants
caught in the act of walking!
Although
the Egyptian Walking Onion is a top-setting onion, it will occasionally produce
miniature flowers among its sets. The flowers are about 1/4" wide. They have
6 white petals and 6 stamens. Each petal has a vertical pea-green stripe. Most
of the flowers dry up and wither as the sets compete with them for energy.
Miniature Egyptian Walking
Onion flowers.
An Egyptian Walking Onion set looks like, and essentially is, a miniature onion.
Sets produced by these plants are generally smaller than the ordinary annual garden
variety onion sets. They range in size from 1/4 inch to 1 inch in diameter. Each
cluster can have as few as 2 sets, or as many as 20 sets. Sometimes a new leaf
stalk will emerge from a cluster of top-sets like a little branch, and a second
cluster will grow from it, hence the name, "Tree Onion."
The Tree
Onion: top sets are branching from top sets.
In
the ground, the Egyptian Walking Onion plant produces a small onion which can
be harvested. If left in the ground, the onion will produce offsets and form a
group of onions. New leaves and topsets will grow from the onions each year. The
Egyptian Walking Onion is a perennial onion.
An
example of an Egyptian Walking Onion with roots and offsets.
How
and when to plant your Egyptian Walking Onion sets Plant
each "set" in the soil about 1-2 inches deep in full sun. Soil should
be slightly moist and well drained. Egyptian Walking Onions hate wet feet! Plant
in rows about 1 foot apart. The sets should be spaced approximately 3-6 inches
apart in each row. Plant in full sunlight. Egyptian Walking Onion sets can also
be planted in clusters. When planted this way they make a great addition to your
herb garden. They can even be planted in pots to be kept outside or indoors. They
can be planted any time of the year even in the winter as long as the ground isn't
frozen or covered with snow. However, fall is the optimal time to plant them so
they can develop a strong root system and be ready for good growth the following
spring. The following is a list of what to expect when planting your sets at different
times of the year:
Spring: |
Sets
will grow throughout the spring and summer into fully mature plants. A fully mature
plant will have an onion bulb in the ground, leaf stalks, and topsets. Since it
is the plant's first growing season, it will be relatively small compared with
a plant that is 2 or 3 years old. |
Summer: |
Sets
planted at this time will grow roots and leafstalks, and have some onion bulb
development in the ground, but they probably will not produce topsets. It all
depends on the length of your summer (the latitude in which you live) and when
during the summer you planted your sets. If you planted your sets early enough
and you have a long enough summer growing season, then your plants might produce
topsets. |
Fall: |
Sets
planted at this time will grow roots and leafstalks only. The leafstalk will die
back for the winter. The onion bulb will develop a little in the ground and store
enough energy to carry the plant through the winter. A leafstalk will reemerge
in the spring and the plant will grow throughout the spring and summer to maturity. |
Winter: | Sets
are planted at this time of the year only if the soil is not frozen solid. If
you can dig a 1" to 2" deep hole in the soil, then you can plant your
sets. The sets will not grow much at all - maybe a little bit of root growth only,
unless you live where the winters are mild. If this is the case, you might also
get a leafstalk. When planting in the winter, mulching is a good idea. In fact,
mulching is good practice at any time of the year. Mulching keeps the weeds down,
prevents unnecessary water evaporation and erosion, and fertilizes your plants. |
Egyptian
Walking Onions are perennial plants and will grow back each year and yield new
and bigger clusters of sets on the top and new onion offsets in the soil. During
their first year of growth they may not produce topsets. You might see only greens.
But don't be disappointed, your Egyptian Walking Onion plants will grow back the
following year in full force and produce their first clusters of topsets. Once
established, plants may be propagated by division or by planting the sets that
grow from the top. Egyptian Walking Onions are extremely hardy plants. Our plants
have endured harsh winters with temperatures plummeting down to -24° below
zero! Hence the name, "Winter Onion." They grow well in zones 3-9.
Egyptian Walking Onion sets growing green stalks of their own, like miniature
versions of the plant itself.
How
to harvest your Egyptian Walking Onions
Harvesting
the topsets: |
In
mid to late summer and autumn the top-sets may be harvested. Be sure to remove
any bulblets (sets) that have fallen to the ground if you do not want them to
self-sow in their new locations. Despite their name, these plants are very easy
to control and keep from spreading just by harvesting the top-sets. |
Harvesting
the greens: |
The
greens (leaves) may be cut and harvested at any time. If you harvest all the greens
from one plant, the plant will probably not be able to produce topsets for that
year. If the plant is producing several leaf stalks, just harvest one or two of
smaller side leaves, and the plant should still produce topsets. Soon after you
have harvested the leaves from an Egyptian Walking Onion plant, new leaves will
start to grow in their place which can be harvested again. If you live in a mild
climate, your Egyptian Walking Onion plant may produce greens all year round. |
Harvesting
the onion bulbs in the ground: | The
onions at the base of the plant that are growing in the ground can be harvested
in late summer and fall. Be sure to leave some onions in the ground for next year's
crop. Bigger onions may be obtained by cutting off the topsets before they develop
that way the plant can put that energy into the onion bulb in the ground instead
of into the topsets. |
How
to eat your Egyptian Walking Onions Egyptian
Walking Onions taste just like a regular onion, only with a bit more pizzazz!
The entire plant can be eaten. Small onions form at the base in the soil. They
can be eaten and prepared just like any other onion. The hollow greens may be
chopped to eat like chives or green onions. They are excellent when fried, cooked
in soups, or raw in salads. The bulblets that grow from the top are excellent
when peeled and fried. You can even pickle them. Or just pop them in your mouth
like popcorn! Watch out, they're a little spicy!
A cluster
of Egyptian Walking Onion plants in an herb garden.
Egyptian
Walking Onion names Taxonomic
names
Allium
cepa var. proliferum |
Egyptian
Walking Onions are proliferous. A proliferous plant produces new individuals by
budding. This type of plant also produces offshoots, especially from unusual places.
In the case of the Egyptian Walking Onion, an offshoot will grow out form cluster
of sets. Proliferous plants produce an organ or shoot from an organ that is itself
normally the last, as a shoot or a new flower from the midst of a flower. In the
case of the Egyptian Walking Onion, a cluster of topsets grows from a cluster
of topsets forming a multi-tiered plant. |
|
Allium
cepa var. bulbiferous |
Egyptian
Walking Onions are bulbiferous. They produce bulbs! |
Allium
cepa var. viviparum |
Egyptian
Walking Onions are viviparous. They
produce bulbils or new plants rather than seed.
Egyptian Walking Onion sets germinate while still attached to the parent plant.
They can be seen growing leaves and roots before they ever touch the ground. |
Roots
and leaves growing from a
pair of sets still attached to the parent plant. This particular plant produced
only 2 topsets, but they are big ones!
Common
names:
"Egyptian
Walking Onion" or "Walking Onion" |
The
name "Egyptian" is very mysterious. The ancient Egyptians worshipped
onions. They believed that its spherical shape and concentric rings symbolized
eternal life. Onions were even used in Egyptian burials for the pharaohs. Small
onions were found in the eye sockets of Ramesses IV. It is not known whether this
particular species of onion came from the Egyptians or not. The "Egyptian"
part of the name remains a mystery. Maybe the name refers to the way they walk.....do
they "walk like an Egyptian?" The
name "Walking Onion" was given to this plant because it literally walks
to new locations. When the cluster of topsets becomes heavy enough, it will pull
the plant over to the ground. Depending on how tall the plant is and where the
bend occurs, the topsets may fall between 1 to 3 feet away from the base of the
plant. Here they will take root and grow new plants. When these new plants mature
their topsets will eventually hit the ground and start the process all over again.
Egyptian Walking Onion plants can walk between 1 and 3 feet per year! |
"Tree
Onion" |
Egyptian
Walking Onions are known for their ability to grow a twisting stalk from the cluster
of sets at the top of the plant. Another cluster of sets will grow at the end
of this second stalk giving the plant a branching, tree-like appearance. |
"Top
Onion", "Topset Onion", or "Top Setting Onion" |
Egyptian
Walking Onions grow a cluster of sets at the top of the plant instead of seeds. |
"Winter
Onion" |
These
Onions can survive freezing cold winters with temperatures plummeting well below
-24°!
They are hardy to zone 3. |
Egyptian
Walking Onion taxonomy
Kingdom: | Plantae
(plants) |
Division: | Magnoliophyta
(flowering plants) |
Class: | Liliopsida
(monocotyledon - having one seed leaf) |
Order: | Liliales
(lily family, water-hyacinth family, iris family) |
Family: | Alliaceae
(lily family) |
Genus: | Allium
(onion) |
Species: | cepa |
Variations: | proliferum
bulbiferum viviparum | all
are synonymous |
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you are ready to order some Egyptian Walking Onion sets click on the
Egyptian Walking Onion
set below to walk over to the order page! Cool
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