Thanks for sharing your experience.BReeder. They grow deeper, onions, you see their heads on top of the pot kind of, and THAT is where they are, garlic now, you dig a few inches down to get to where the bulb is. You said you had them in pots, so did I, unfortunately the lower levels of my pots were at a place where the water could collect, and after 10 days of straight rain, standing in that water 'down there' they neck rotted. Where as, since I didn't know better, I poked my finger in the top regions and said, oh ok, they are good, not water logged.
I have a few here that I am growing in pots and I move them around the yard all the time, they don't seem to mind it one bit. If you did have to transport them, I don't think it will hurt them any at all.
Aaron
I do want to transplant them at least once to put them in a raised bed when the weather warms a bit.
What I do know so far is my garlic seems perfectly happy for the time being. In some of the pots all the cloves I planned have sprouted already. I think this stage of my little experiment is going to be a success. We'll just have to see if the fare will for the next several weeks and then if they transplant fine.
Now on to onions... those can just be direct sowed in the Spring as bulbs right?
I'm not growing onion from seed, but from bulbs. Although I am growing a wild onion from seed, but that's for the flowers. Those are sprouting BTW. That was my last tray of wildflowers to begin sprouting. Although some of the seeds in my second (out of 3) tray are not sprouted so now those are the ones we are waiting for. I'm also waiting for celery to sprout... it's about 65F in the den, will celery sprout that low?