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Do Alliums cross-pollinate?

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  • Do Alliums cross-pollinate?

    I'm growing lots of perennial alliums this year - some from bulbils, other's from seed or offsets. Are they likely to cross-pollinate each other and does it matter?
    Please let me know before I plant out any more than the 20 or so Babington leeks that have just gone in the ground

  • #2
    Not sure of the answer to your question VC, but while googling I found this site which you may find interesting Allium Species - the Perennial Onions

    What other alliums were you going to grow?

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    • #3
      You might find some answers here VC; Onions and leeks. Seed saving guidelines from the Heritage Seed Library.

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      • #4
        Thanks RL. I found this :-
        Keeping Seed Pure Bega: All sorts of Alliums

        Alliums are cross-pollinated by insect. Growing one type of chives, one of garlic chives, one of either common or welsh onion and one type of leek within a 400 metre radius should result in good seed of each. Of the varieties that do not set seed, such as potato and tree onions, seed savers can grow as many as they like knowing they will not contaminate their seed strains.
        Then I started to get really confused
        I'm growing (or plan to):-
        Babingtons perennial leeks
        Three cornered leeks
        Ordinary leeks
        Elephant Garlic
        Several types of garlic including some from bulbils
        Shallots (a couple of types)
        Walking onion
        Potato onion
        Chives
        Garlic chives
        Welsh Onion

        and some ornamental alliums............

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        • #5
          Originally posted by veggiechicken View Post
          Then I started to get really confused
          I'm growing (or plan to):-
          Babingtons perennial leeks
          Three cornered leeks
          Ordinary leeks
          Elephant Garlic
          Several types of garlic including some from bulbils
          Shallots (a couple of types)
          Walking onion
          Potato onion
          Chives
          Garlic chives
          Welsh Onion

          and some ornamental alliums............
          Cross pollination won't matter unless you plan to save seed from your plants.

          Shallots are usually propagated from bulbs or sets, so again you can save some of your best to re-plant next year. You don't let them flower, never mind get pollinated, so no problem.

          Chives (and presumably garlic chives) you can propagate by lifting and dividing the clumps of small bulbs that they form, so again no problem. I do leave chives to flower though, cos the bees love them.

          Ordinary leeks won't (or shouldn't) flower until the second year. I usually use all mine and buy fresh seed for the next year.

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          • #6
            Its the Babington leeks that I'm most concerned about as I'm growing them on from bulbils and it takes 2 years until they flower. I don't want to wait 2 years to find that they're not the real thing and have been b@st@rdized by a wanton chive or a lusty leek

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            • #7
              Where did you get them from?

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              • #8
                I'm confident that the one's I'm growing from bulbils are the real thing. Its what happens to them when they flower this year that worries me - if I'm growing other alliums nearby. We're in year 2 now

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                • #9
                  Am I right in saying you just use the leaves from Babington leeks? And they regrow every year?

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                  • #10
                    I haven't got to the point of being able to eat any yet, Rusty. I started, last March with a one -year old plant and a handful of bulbils. The plant flowered but I gave away most of the bulbils to the exotic seed swap. The ones I'm growing now are from the original bulbils and I have about 30 of them - they should flower this year. The original leek plant has regrown as two leeks
                    So they're a multiplier leek that also grows from bulbils in the flower head.
                    As a wild flower they grow around the rocky south west coast of England and Wales and, on the island of FlatHolm in the Severn Estuary that I visit frequently. There is a massive colony of them there, covering quite an area, and I'd like to replicate that here in the garden.

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                    • #11
                      Are you wanting to save seeds? If so don't let any others flower nearby as they will cross.

                      Some of us live in the past, always talking about back then. Some of us live in the future, always planning what we are going to do. And, then there are those, who neither look behind or ahead, but just enjoy the moment of right now.

                      Which one are you and is it how you want to be?

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                      • #12
                        I want to save bulbils (which are effectively seed)

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                        • #13
                          I'm don't know my onions well, but on most plants bulbils are the same genetics as their parent, so it wouldn't matter what you grew them with.
                          My gardening blog: In Spades, last update 30th April 2018.
                          Chrysanthemum notes page here.

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                          • #14
                            My difficulty is - that the flower head has to be pollinated before it can form bulbils - is there a risk that there could be cross-pollination from another allium living locally.
                            I know that I'm unlikely to have flowers on ordinary onions or leeks - but there are always flowers on the chives and garlic chives.

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                            • #15
                              Originally posted by veggiechicken View Post
                              My difficulty is - that the flower head has to be pollinated before it can form bulbils - is there a risk that there could be cross-pollination from another allium living locally.
                              I know that I'm unlikely to have flowers on ordinary onions or leeks - but there are always flowers on the chives and garlic chives.
                              No they don't come after flowers, if you cut any flowers off they will still set bulbils.

                              I always have leeks flowering and they are right by my chives and the leeks always grow fine. I know, I grow bleu de solaise from home saved seeds and they are leeks, blue, hardy. And taste perfect.

                              I think the issue is if you have 2 types of leeks and you want seed from one then just stop the other flowering.

                              Your Babbies will be just fine. The bulbils are a vegetative propagation method not a sexual propagation method (which need pollination)
                              Last edited by zazen999; 03-04-2013, 09:58 PM.

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