Yellow Onion Jady HF1 Seed Bag
3742042
This variety, with a late cycle and long day, offers large bulbs, round, hard and very dense, brilliant copper color. It has an excellent storage capacity, up to 9 months in optimal storage conditions.
This variety, with a late cycle and long day, offers large bulbs, round, hard and very dense, brilliant copper color. It has excellent storage capacity for up to 9 months in optimal storage conditions.
Large round bulbs
Copper color
Late variety
Onion is a good companion to beets, lettuce, celery and radishes in the garden. It is best known for the carrot because it keeps the fly away from the carrot. The carrot fly (Psila rosae) is a fearsome insect with the appearance of a small black fly with an orange head, measuring about 5 mm. It attacks carrots, but also parsnips, celery or parsley by laying its eggs right next to vegetables, on the ground. The larvae will then devour the roots of the plants by digging tunnels from the surface of the soil to their tips. The roots end up rotting. It is all the more difficult to get rid of this pest because its larvae are able to hibernate in the soil. Don't insist! Onions and the whole family of alliacs (garlic, onions, shallots) do not get along at all with legumes (beans, peas and beans). Legumes have the property of capturing nitrogen present in the soil, they naturally create an area richer in nitrogen that may be suitable for some plants but not for alliacs, which are precisely not fans of nitrogen at all. Also, onions will not mix well with potatoes and sage, and especially with cabbages as they compete.
Family: POTAGER SEMENCES
Latin name: Allium cepa
Type: Root Vegetable
Sowing period: mid-February to April
Harvest period: August to September
Exposure: Sun
Watering: Low
Soil: Fine soil without pebbles, to have beautiful homogeneous bulbs.
Net weight in g: 2
T-ground: 10 degrees C
No. Seeds: 1 g - 250 seeds
EPP: YES
Yield: 3 kg/m2
Large round bulbs
Copper color
Late variety
Onion is a good companion to beets, lettuce, celery and radishes in the garden. It is best known for the carrot because it keeps the fly away from the carrot. The carrot fly (Psila rosae) is a fearsome insect with the appearance of a small black fly with an orange head, measuring about 5 mm. It attacks carrots, but also parsnips, celery or parsley by laying its eggs right next to vegetables, on the ground. The larvae will then devour the roots of the plants by digging tunnels from the surface of the soil to their tips. The roots end up rotting. It is all the more difficult to get rid of this pest because its larvae are able to hibernate in the soil. Don't insist! Onions and the whole family of alliacs (garlic, onions, shallots) do not get along at all with legumes (beans, peas and beans). Legumes have the property of capturing nitrogen present in the soil, they naturally create an area richer in nitrogen that may be suitable for some plants but not for alliacs, which are precisely not fans of nitrogen at all. Also, onions will not mix well with potatoes and sage, and especially with cabbages as they compete.
Family: POTAGER SEMENCES
Latin name: Allium cepa
Type: Root Vegetable
Sowing period: mid-February to April
Harvest period: August to September
Exposure: Sun
Watering: Low
Soil: Fine soil without pebbles, to have beautiful homogeneous bulbs.
Net weight in g: 2
T-ground: 10 degrees C
No. Seeds: 1 g - 250 seeds
EPP: YES
Yield: 3 kg/m2