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  2. Here’s a Complete Guide To Growing Garlic in Your Garden - AOL

    www.aol.com/easy-grow-garlic-keep-handy...

    A few more smart tips to remember are to order high-quality seed garlic online early in the season for best results and avoid planting grocery-store garlic as it may be treated so it won't sprout.

  3. Alliaria petiolata - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alliaria_petiolata

    Alliaria petiolata, or garlic mustard, is a biennial flowering plant in the mustard family (Brassicaceae).It is native to Europe, western and central Asia, north-western Africa, Morocco, Iberia and the British Isles, north to northern Scandinavia, [2] and east to northern Pakistan and Xinjiang in western China.

  4. Easily Grow Your Own Garlic With This Fall Planting Guide - AOL

    www.aol.com/easily-grow-own-garlic-fall...

    The first shots will push through the mulch in about 4 to 8 weeks, depending on the weather and the variety you plant. Fertilize Garlic In Spring. As the weather warms in spring, you will see ...

  5. Garlic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Garlic

    Harvest is in late spring or early summer. Garlic plants can be grown closely together, leaving enough space for the bulbs to mature, and are easily grown in containers of sufficient depth. Garlic does well in loose, dry, well-drained soils in sunny locations, and is hardy throughout USDA climate zones 4–9. When selecting garlic for planting ...

  6. Tulbaghia violacea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tulbaghia_violacea

    Tulbaghia violacea, commonly known as society garlic, pink agapanthus, [2] wild garlic, sweet garlic, spring bulbs, or spring flowers, [3] is a species of flowering plant in the family Amaryllidaceae. [1] [4] It is indigenous to southern Africa (KwaZulu-Natal and Cape Province), and reportedly naturalized in Tanzania and Mexico. [5]

  7. Allium canadense - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Allium_canadense

    Allium canadense, the Canada onion, Canadian garlic, wild garlic, meadow garlic and wild onion [6] is a perennial plant native to eastern North America [a] from Texas to Florida to New Brunswick to Montana. The species is also cultivated in other regions as an ornamental and as a garden culinary herb. [7] The plant is also reportedly ...

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