When did you plant the garlic?
I have garlic all over my garden that stays as a perennial crop. I let the clumps keep getting bigger and bigger, and let the scapes mature into bulbils which can then be planted, allowed to fall where they will, planted around the base of trees in the orchard, or fed to the chickens.
I've tried planting garlic twice. Zero success both times.
Karen, what kind did you plant, and where did you get it? If it was a soft neck garlic, that may be your problem. Stiff neck garlic excels in the northern climates. If it came from the grocery store, that may have been your problem, as it was most likely sprayed with a chemical to delay sprouting. Many crops receive those sprays, and even if they do sprout in the garden, they are harmed such that they will never bear a viable crop. Generally, garlic cloves are planted in the fall, before hard freezes. This allows them to establish a healthy root system, and they may even sprout some top growth before the ground freezes. They then sprout very early in the spring, grow like mad, send up a scape (which you will want to break off) before the leaves start to die back. When the leaves are dying back, you then harvest and dry them. Save a few of your best cloves from your best heads to plant the next year's crop.
Interesting. Can you tell me what kind you plant, and how big a head does it grow? Do you wait and harvest the head, or do you just use it for greens?any day spring, summer, fall or winter whatever use a glass in the kitchen window