Allium Species, Egyptian Tree Onion, Walking Onion, Topset Onion

Alliumx proliferum

Family
Amaryllidaceae (am-uh-ril-id-AY-see-ee)
Genus
Allium (AL-ee-um)
Synonym
Allium cepa var. viviparum
Allium cepa var. bulbiferum
Allium cepa var. proliferum
Other Details
Water Requirements
Foliage Color
Dark Green
Where to Grow
Bloom Characteristics
Bloom Size
Other details
Soil pH requirements
Patent Information
Propagation Methods
Seed Collecting
Regional

This plant is said to grow outdoors in the following regions:

Daleville, Alabama

Wedowee, Alabama

Hereford, Arizona

Bigelow, Arkansas

Fayetteville, Arkansas

Little Rock, Arkansas

Alameda, California

Simi Valley, California

Stanford, California

Vallejo, California

Clifton, Colorado

Colorado Springs, Colorado

Denver, Colorado

Bozrah, Connecticut

Lakeland, Florida

Pensacola, Florida

Dallas, Georgia

Danielsville, Georgia

Decatur, Georgia

Geneva, Illinois

Lincolnwood, Illinois

Mackinaw, Illinois

Bloomington, Indiana

Jeffersonville, Indiana

Kimmell, Indiana

Newburgh, Indiana

Des Moines, Iowa

Prospect, Kentucky

New Orleans, Louisiana

Falmouth, Maine

Milo, Maine

North Waterford, Maine

Oxford, Maine

Laurel, Maryland

Salem, Massachusetts

Andover, Minnesota

Isle, Minnesota

Minneapolis, Minnesota(2 reports)

Saint Paul, Minnesota

Marietta, Mississippi

Saucier, Mississippi

Holden, Missouri

Carson City, Nevada

Manchester, New Hampshire

Neptune, New Jersey

Albuquerque, New Mexico

Santa Fe, New Mexico(2 reports)

Ithaca, New York

Massapequa Park, New York

West Kill, New York

Boone, North Carolina

Elizabeth City, North Carolina

Belfield, North Dakota

Medora, North Dakota

Columbus, Ohio

Lynchburg, Ohio

Williamsburg, Ohio(2 reports)

Hulbert, Oklahoma

Jay, Oklahoma

Portland, Oregon

Wilsonville, Oregon

Fayetteville, Pennsylvania

Greencastle, Pennsylvania

Greensburg, Pennsylvania

Harrisburg, Pennsylvania

Landisburg, Pennsylvania

Wilkes Barre, Pennsylvania

Laurens, South Carolina

Middleton, Tennessee

Murfreesboro, Tennessee

Austin, Texas

Belton, Texas

Boerne, Texas

Dallas, Texas

De Leon, Texas

Fort Worth, Texas

Houston, Texas

Kerrville, Texas

Spicewood, Texas

Weimar, Texas

West Dummerston, Vermont

Hampton, Virginia

Newport News, Virginia

Colville, Washington

Garfield, Washington

Vancouver, Washington

Porterfield, Wisconsin

Kinnear, Wyoming

Riverton, Wyoming

Upton, Wyoming

show all

Featured Videos

Gardener's Notes:

16
positives
0
neutral
0
negative
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B
B
Hayden, AL (Zone 8b) | January 2013 | positive

Love this work horse of the garden! Top and bottom set. You have to see to believe! Definite heirloom, given to me by my great uncle J...Read More

E
Vancouver, WA (Zone 8b) | July 2012 | positive

These Egyptian Walking Onions should be in more gardens! They provide scallions so early the garden can't be worked to plant other veget...Read More

T
De Leon, TX (Zone 8a) | October 2010 | positive

My favorite onion even though it's on the hot side and doesn't make a huge bulb. These are forever onions. Once you plant them, you shoul...Read More

L
Stanford, CA | September 2007 | positive

This is a great source of year-round green onions. They are still green even through the summer in dry Northern California. Multiplier o...Read More

O
Conrad, MT | July 2007 | positive

found it initially growing in a windbreak near Recluse, WY; first time ever seen. now growing in Lewistown and Helena, MT; will plant th...Read More

S
Portland, OR (Zone 8b) | May 2006 | positive

I got my Egyptian Onion through Richter's as part of a catastrophically delayed order (not really Richter's fault and they were very nice...Read More

G
(Zone 5a) | January 2006 | positive

We have had these onions for years. It is great to have onions from the garden before other onions are ready.

P
Westminster, MD (Zone 6b) | June 2005 | positive

This dear plant makes me smile, just looking at it! It "walks" casually about its area of my garden, leaving next generation's starter w...Read More

B
Hillsboro, OH (Zone 6a) | January 2005 | positive

These are great! You can eat the stalks as chives, eat the small top sets or eat the bottom bulbs. They self sow enough to keep you in ...Read More

G
Franklin Grove, IL (Zone 5a) | May 2004 | positive

In my Chicago garden it seems almost impossible to kill this plant. It survives extreme winters and summers, flooding and drought. Whil...Read More

E
E
| October 2003 | positive

These survived winter in my zone 3 garden too.

N
N
Metamora, OH | September 2003 | positive

I found three of these plants across the street from my house with tiny bulbs growing out of the top and small, underdeveloped-looking o...Read More

C
| July 2003 | positive

Never heard of this herb until I found one for sale at a perennial sale. Have planted it in the garden and there seems to be little bulb...Read More

D
san antonio, TX (Zone 8a) | April 2003 | positive

I'm nuts about them; I grew them in Casper, Wyoming (U.S.), zone 4, 20 years ago. I found generous sources to start again in San Antonio...Read More

W
Spicewood, TX (Zone 8b) | August 2002 | positive

Possibly A. cepa viviparum.

Instead of blooms, these produce topsets. After harvesting the parent plant, break off...Read More

T
T
Murfreesboro, TN (Zone 7a) | August 2002 | positive

So far, so good. A few dozen plants are already filling in a 15 square-foot bed. Looking forward to onions this winter!

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