Vegetable

Bulb onion

Allium cepa · Amaryllidaceae

Also called: Onion, common onion, dry bulb onion

Bulb onion (Allium cepa) is a moderate-water vegetable well suited to Tucson and the low desert. It thrives in full sun, with a slow growth rate.

Bulb onion (Allium cepa) growing in Tucson
Photo: Colin (CC BY-SA 3.0) · Wikimedia Commons

Bulb onion at a glance

Water use
Moderate (established)
Sun
Full sun (6+ hours); maximum sun drives both top growth and bulb sizing.
Mature size
Tops 12-24 in tall; bulbs 2-4+ in depending on variety.
Growth rate
Slow
Bloom
White to greenish-white globe (biennial; flowers only if it bolts - undesirable in bulb crops), Grown for bulbs, not bloom; harvest late spring/early summer in Tucson. Bolting (flower stalks) is a defect that hurts storage.
Cold hardiness
Cool-season; frost-hardy and overwinters in Tucson. Critically, choose SHORT-DAY (or intermediate-day) varieties for Tucson's latitude - long-day types won't bulb properly here.
Soil
Loose, well-drained, fertile loam rich in organic matter; remove rocks/clods and amend caliche so bulbs expand. Tolerates slightly alkaline soils.
Native range
Central Asia; not native to the Sonoran Desert.
Best used as
Cool-season bulb vegetable, green/bunching onions when pulled young, raised beds and in-ground rows, long-storage crop after curing
Wildlife
Flowers (if bolted) attract bees; the pungent foliage deters many browsers.
Toxicity
Edible and non-toxic to people. TOXIC to dogs and cats (all Allium species cause hemolytic anemia) - keep harvested and growing onions away from pets.

How to grow Bulb onion in Tucson & the low desert

Watering

Keep soil consistently moist through the growing season - shallow roots need frequent water; in Tucson water deeply about every 2-3 days. Taper off and stop watering when tops yellow and fall over to cure the bulbs.

Fertilizer & nutrients

Heavy nitrogen feeder during leaf growth (more leaves = bigger bulbs); side-dress with nitrogen every few weeks while tops grow, then stop once bulbing begins. Adequate phosphorus and potassium support root and bulb development.

Pruning & care

No pruning. Do not cut green tops during growth (each leaf becomes a ring); harvest when tops naturally flop and yellow, then cure.

Notes

In Tucson plant SHORT-DAY varieties. Sow seed in fall (Sept-Oct) or set out transplants/sets in late fall through winter (Oct-Jan) for harvest in late spring/early summer. Day length triggers bulbing, so variety choice is the single most important decision. Cure harvested bulbs in a dry, shaded, airy spot before storing.

Sources: University of Arizona Cooperative Extension (Pima County) low-desert vegetable planting calendar; Pima County Master Gardeners; Arizona Master Gardener Manual

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