It’s a Garlic Planting Party – Win a Party Prize Package!

This is exciting. The folks at Peaceful Valley Farm and Garden Supply (PVF) have asked Gardenerd to participate in their Garlic Planting Party this week, and you reap the benefits. One lucky Gardenerd reader will win a Garlic Party Prize Package (details below) to enhance your garlic growing experience this fall.

But first, a little about the subject at hand. Here in Southern California, we typically grow softneck varieties, though I know someone who grows hardnecks because he didn’t know he wasn’t supposed to grow them here. Seems to work for him.  Anywho… we plant in October, it grows through winter, and is harvested sometime in May through June.

Early California Garlic is great for storing and braiding.

Garlic is one of the easiest crops to grow, with relatively few pests or diseases. We have rust fungus in our soil, so we rotate garlic to a new location each year to keep it at bay. PVF has a great instructional video on how to plant garlic, so check that out to get started.

In the south, California Early White is a popular variety to grow. It is a Silverskin variety, which tends to keep longer, and produces between 12-16 cloves per bulb. Long-storage softnecks are best for garlic braiding, so California Early is a good choice if you plan to braid your harvest.

Our year supply of garlic grown in 7 square feet (using Square Foot Gardening plant spacing).

When it comes to harvesting, we wait until only 5 or 6 leaves are still green, we stop watering and wait a few days for the soil to dry out before pulling the bulbs. We cure the harvest for several weeks on newspaper out of direct sunlight and then it’s ready for braiding.

Check out our Garlic Braiding Video learn how to store your harvest in style.

Now – on to the Garlic Party.

This is a chance to learn more about growing, harvesting and cooking with garlic and shallots from bloggers all over the country. Each blogger will be giving away a different variety. Here are my cohorts and their respective giveaways:

Susy Morris at Chiot’s Run                         (Garlic combo)
Gen Schmidt at North Coast Gardening  (Russian Red)
Jodi Torpey at Western Gardeners           (Purple Italian)
Theresa Loe at Living Homegrown           (German Red)
Chris McLaughlin at A Suburban Farmer (Purple Glazer)
Charlotte Germane & Cindy McNatt  at Dirt Du Jour  (Shallots)
Peaceful Valley Farm & Garden Supply  at PVF (Bogatyr)

If you want to win that variety of garlic or shallots, leave a comment on the respective blog. You have until midnight PT, Wednesday, October 17th to post. Winners will be chosen at random and here is what you’ll win:

Garlic Planting Party Prize

  • 1 pound of organic seed garlic (each blog will have a different variety)
  • 1 quart of our Liquid Kelp (for soaking the cloves overnight before planting)
  • 10 gallon Smart Pot (to plant some in a container)
  • Garlic Twist (clever kitchen gadget that minces the cloves when you twist it; easy to use and clean)
  • 1 5×7 photo print of the garlic variety

More about Garlic

Before we get to the contest question, here are some great Gardenerd blog posts about garlic that can help you this season:

Garlic Kale Soup

The Trick to Bigger Garlic

Harvesting Garlic

Storing Garlic: Sprout Not My Friend

Okay – now for the question: What’s your most successful garlic experience? This includes growing, cooking or eating it. Leave your comment below (be sure to include an email address) and we’ll announce the winner next week.

Happy garlic-ing!

Bonnie Wicker  is THE WINNER of the   Garlic Party Prize Package!

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190 Responses to It’s a Garlic Planting Party – Win a Party Prize Package!

  1. monique says:

    i have found crushing several cloves (nearly a full bulb in many cases) into a freshly made pot of soup (typically a homemade stock veggie, but sometimes a chicken soup with a bone mineral broth) provides not only a delicious taste, but also a huge help to an inflamed gut. garlic is so helpful to the immune system that it should become a staple to our diet.

  2. Pat Chesebro says:

    Have planted garlic for the last three years. It’s become a yearly tradition. Last year they were smaller than expected so hopefully I figure how to avoid that this year. Any suggestions?

    Hoping to win!

  3. Heather says:

    Love, love, LOVE garlic in our family…but haven’t grown it in a few years. Thanks for the inspiration to add it back into our growing plans this year.

  4. Christel Billes says:

    Love garlic; hope to win.

  5. Holly Windsong Greenwood says:

    only grew garlic last year, harvested about two months ago. grew it in four places, with entirely different results and am learning a lot: one location, no direct sunshine, all cloves rotted away. second location, all garlic plants overgrown with other annuals. I’ve just pulled out everything else growing there, and my garlic greens are getting stronger quickly. third location, interplanted garlic with other alliums. everything was undersized, in part because I planted so late (January 2012), in part because of nitrogen deficit. fourth location: success! large harvest. full sun, mulch, routine weeding, regular watering.

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