I had a good year last season with
onions for the 250g and under class. At most shows this class is well
supported, as you don’t need exotic growing areas to be able to grow them like
you do for the large onions. This is certainly the case at the NVS shows where
there are several top growers of 250g onions such as Sherie Plumb, Ronnie
Jackson and Graham Wagstaffe. I’ve exhibited at National and Branch level
several times without success but have always been content that my bulbs must
have been there or thereabouts, and I was certainly never out of my league. So
it was a nice surprise to come 3rd at Malvern last year in a well
contested class yet again, with the variety Tasco. I really needed an extra
week or two to have them fully ripened.
My pal Ronnie Jackson won the class at
Malvern and his set were adjudged best exhibit in show. Beautiful. The onions,
not Ronnie. Obviously.
The same set actually won for me at
Derby Show in late October when they had ripened to a nice straw brown colour,
which was a lovely bonus in a class of over 20 entries. I had a big grin all
weekend.
There are several varieties suitable
for this class, others are Toughball, Canto, Globo, Vento to name but a few,
but I’ve always liked Tasco as I find it a bit more robust than the others when
grown outside. Having said that mine are now grown in a long border in my
tunnel which makes tending them an easy task. It’s important to keep them
growing upright with split canes and plastic support clips (available from
Medwyns) so that the growing point is in the middle of the bulb and also if the
plant flops to one side you can get uneven shapes which is a fault the judge
will use to down point you. These were sown in January, planted out a month ago
and won’t be ready to harvest for at least another month when I’ll need to be
checking the diameters daily and getting them up when they reach the magic
figure of 83mm. I use nothing more than a cardboard gauge I made myself for
this task. Last season they were a bit late going in so weren’t getting up to
size at the time that I needed to get them ripened in time for the shows, so I
had to settle on 80mm. This meant most of my bulbs weighed between 200-225g.
Bear in mind they may weigh more than 250g when you pull them up and leave 6”
of stem, but they should be under (or better still bang on!) when you prep them
for show. Make sure you have a good quality set of digital scales for this purpose.
The judge will!
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