Can Garlic Be Planted With Sunflowers?

Garlic’s strong scent not only deters aphids and rabbits but also has fungicidal properties that can help prevent diseases in sunflowers. Planting garlic around sunflowers can create a protective barrier, promoting healthier growth and extending the blooming period of your sunflowers. Sunflowers can make great companion plants with many types of vegetables, such as corn, crimson clover, and fruit trees. However, planting the wrong plants around garlic can hinder growth or cause it to wilt.

Garlic boasts similar characteristics to other alliums when planted with sunflowers, as its ultra-pungent and strong aroma repels unwanted bugs. In fact, even manufacturers use it as an ingredient in some products. The strong onion and garlic odor repels animals like squirrels and deer that love to feast on sunflower seeds, keeping sunflowers healthy.

Garlic can be planted with vegetables, salad, and herbs to enhance flavors and attract pollinators. However, it is important to avoid planting garlic near beans, peas, sage, asparagus, parsley, and sunflowers. Planting onions and other alliums like leeks, shallots, and garlic at the base of your sunflower crop is an efficient space-saving method for a small garden. These plants have the same watering needs but don’t attract any of the same insect pests.

Onions and garlic are known for their strong scent, repelling many annoying pests around other plants. Garlic has an early harvest time, but the time it spends growing with your sunflowers is a key time to deter pests and keep them away for the rest of the season.

Plants generally need their space, and sunflowers should be ideally spaced at least three feet apart in any direction. It is important to avoid planting garlic near plants that can have a negative effect on its growth, such as fennel, beans, sunflowers, potatoes, and eggplants. Chives (Allium schoenoprasum), like onions, are a member of the Allium genus and boast a light flavor reminiscent of garlic or onions.


📹 Companion Planting Garlic

Garlic Loves Other Plants…And Other Plants Love Garlic! Garlic is one of the best Companion Crops you can plant. It can be used …


Can you plant onions next to sunflowers?

Sunflowers can be grown in Texas without transplanting, making them a suitable choice for the hot summer months. They are tolerant and not picky, and they should grow well with onions, as they belong to different families. However, sunflowers need nutrients, which onions may lose due to their heavy feeder nature. Harvesting onions may damage sunflower roots, so it’s important to monitor differences and ensure proper harvesting to avoid potential pests.

Can sunflowers be planted near garlic?
(Image Source: Pixabay.com)

Can sunflowers be planted near garlic?

Sunflowers are a great companion plant for gardeners, providing protection from pests like aphids. They have tall stalks and deep roots, which help them reach deep into the soil for necessary nutrients. Crimson clover attracts beneficial insects, including essential pollinators and those that feed on other insects that prey on sunflower plants. Cucumbers appreciate the afternoon shade provided by sunflowers, which also attract beneficial insects with cucumber beetles at the top of their menu.

Daisies prefer cooler conditions, and sunflowers can provide just the right amount of shade to shelter their delicate cousins. Marigolds are a low-growing flower that is not appealing to many insects, making them a great companion for sunflowers. Onions and garlic repel pests, clearing the way for friendly pollinators. Sunflowers’ large heads provide some welcome afternoon shade, especially during the early harvest time when garlic grows with sunflowers.

Pumpkins and melons are natural weed fighters, shading out weeds and keeping moisture from evaporating from the soil too quickly. Sunflowers attract pollinators to squash blossoms, and their leaves shade the ground to keep out weeds and keep the soil surface cool. Sunflowers act as aphid traps for tomatoes and peppers, but if you want to grow tomatoes, peppers, and sunflowers through to harvest, plant aphid-deterring chives.

Lettuce can benefit from sunflowers providing just the right amount of afternoon shade. Columbine, heliotrope, lavender, ornamental onion, and yarrow are all great deer deterrents, and sunflowers can protect your sunflowers from hungry deer. The Four Sisters combination of corn, squash, and peas with sunflowers is another great combination of companion plantings.

What vegetables grow well with garlic?

Garlic’s powerful odor deters common pests and is beneficial for various crops like tomatoes, potatoes, sweet peppers, eggplant, spinach, broccoli, cauliflower, kale, lettuce, beets, parsnips, and carrots. Homegrown garlic is low maintenance, organically protects plants from pests and diseases, encourages plant growth, and attracts beneficial insects. Its powerful aroma makes it an ideal companion plant for most plants, and can be planted in negative space or around the border. The summer sale offers up to 30% off all raised garden beds.

What should you not plant near sunflowers?

Sunflowers can inhibit the growth of nearby plants like potatoes and beans due to their release of allelopathic chemicals. They should also avoid plants with shallow root systems, as they compete for nutrients and water. Sunflowers should be paired with plants that thrive in similar soil and sun conditions, such as tomatoes, which prefer drier conditions. Sunflowers require full sun, so shade-loving plants like hostas or ferns should be avoided.

Can garlic and peppers be planted together?

Growing garlic as a companion plant with peppers can help repel aphids and beetles from taking over the peppers, maximizing garden space for better yields, and attracting beneficial insects and pollinators. Both sweet and hot peppers benefit from companion planting, and herbs like basil, chives, and oregano, along with vegetables like carrots and onions, are excellent choices for companion planting with peppers. The herbs, flowers, and vegetables that best complement your pepper patch can help ensure a healthy and productive garden.

What flowers can you plant next to garlic?
(Image Source: Pixabay.com)

What flowers can you plant next to garlic?

Garlic is a beneficial plant for various plants, including vegetables like beets, potatoes, carrots, eggplants, tomatoes, peppers, cauliflower, and broccoli, as it repels predators. Leafy greens like cabbage, lettuce, arugula, spinach, and kale also thrive near garlic, as they don’t compete for nutrients. Fruit trees can benefit from garlic planting due to its repellent properties, which can help protect them from pests like caterpillars, aphids, and borers.

Garlic also attracts pollinators, boosting the tree’s fruit crop. Moreover, garlic offers benefits to flowers, such as deterring aphids and helping against rose black spot. It also helps grow larger and stronger roses and increases their fragrance. Geraniums, marigolds, and nasturtiums are also good companions for garlic, as they repel pests. Garlic bulbs can be purchased online from Burpee, Amazon, and Nature Hills.

What is the mistake in planting garlic?
(Image Source: Pixabay.com)

What is the mistake in planting garlic?

This article outlines 12 mistakes to avoid when planting and growing hardneck garlic. Firstly, planting in a shaded area is not recommended. Garlic plants thrive best when exposed to full sun during spring and summer daylight hours. If leaves cannot fully engage in the photosynthesis process, they may not reach their full potential. A research study published in January 2009 revealed that plants grown in full sunlight (0 shade treatment) exhibited a significantly greater leaf photosynthetic rate compared to those grown in 60 shade treatment.

Plants grown under 0 and 30 shade produced more biomass and had greater leaf mass than plants grown under 60 shade. Additionally, leaves of the 60 shade treatment had significantly greater chlorophyll content than leaves of the 0 and 30 shade treatments.

To avoid these mistakes, locate a plot of land that receives full-sun during the spring and summer months and plant your garlic there. Measure hours of sunlight in your garden by starting early in the morning and noting the garden sunlight exposure at that time. For a more sophisticated solution, use physical modeling tools such as sun angle calculators, sun path diagrams, sundials, and heliodons as resources for performing daylighting analyses.

What should you not plant after garlic?

After garlic, you can plant various crops, but avoid alliums like leeks or onions. To plant, find your first fall frost date by searching for your garden’s growing zone. In Southern Oregon, the first frost date is around October. If you live in a mild climate, you may have time for beans or summer squash. Fall greens like lettuce, kale, swiss chard, carrots, barrows, and radishes can thrive after garlic. Choose plants that do well in mild climates, such as beans or summer squash.

Can sunflowers grow near garlic?

Plant onions and other alliums at the base of your sunflower crop for space-saving and insect-resistant plants. They repel animal pests and have a strong scent. Work well-rotted compost into the soil before planting to provide nutrients for sunflowers and onions. Carrots are resistant to sunflower allelopathy, as their roots pull nutrients deeper than sunflower roots, reducing competition for nutrients.

Do sunflowers like garlic?
(Image Source: Pixabay.com)

Do sunflowers like garlic?

Plant onions and other alliums at the base of your sunflower crop for space-saving and insect-resistant plants. They repel animal pests and have a strong scent. Work well-rotted compost into the soil before planting to provide nutrients for sunflowers and onions. Carrots are resistant to sunflower allelopathy, as their roots pull nutrients deeper than sunflower roots, reducing competition for nutrients.


📹 COMPANION PLANTING Made SIMPLE with The Rule of 3!!

In this video we break down The Rule of 3 when it comes to making Companion Planting SIMPLE! Let me know your favorite …


Can Garlic Be Planted With Sunflowers?
(Image Source: Pixabay.com)

9 comments

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

  • Thank you for posting. I am in the US, and we are tearing ourselves apart. Not making a political statement, just stating a fact. Former friends are now “kill you” enemies. It is awful. So appreciate, what you do. An escape. The wife watches HGTV, I watch veg vids, in separate rooms. She comes in teasingly accusing me of perusal porn, all I say is yes – “Vegetable Pornography” – then looks at it and says, “Not another 5 gallon planter!” Thanks again, you do a great job.

  • You have a article on storing your garlic cloves in the freezer to plant out in the fall. I followed it step by step. I froze 21 Russian Red Hard neck Garlic cloves. I planted them out with 5 other varieties of garlic and I’m checking them often like you do the mail box when you are expecting money. So far I don’t see any signs of life but I’m trusting the process. You know your stuff. I’ll give you a follow up comment when I harvest in about 7 months. 😉

  • This article have not came at a better time, my God; you have read my mind: as last evening I instinctively placed a few kale, 10 spinach and some lettuce and 6 tomatoes seeds from my newly delivered package of seeds and was thinking 🤔 am I doing the right thing … lol 😂 (planting with garlic)🤭 but think and said, hey it’s a trial test.. for sprouting after I say your articles of growing garlic I planted 15 more in an indoor pot (glass door evening sunlight) like Friday night..hopefully eagerly😬 awaits for sprout. Thanks so much Jeff for these awesome but steady.. 🙏🇨🇦

  • Garlic, Roses and Nasturtiums all love each other. You can cut some of the green garlic leaf tips to toss into a salad or whatever. The darker nasturtium flowers are sweetest to eat. The yellow ones attract aphids which helps protect your roses. A finely shredded leaf will give your tossed salads a tasty, mustard flavoured zing. Garlic is a natural anti-biotic. So good for so much…

  • Hi Jeff, I know u have some indoor plants….. (seen it in and behind you in your previous articles) 🤪 Can you be so kind enough to make a article on what or kind of indoor plants (vegetables) I can grow indoors ? Due to our Canadian winter 🥶 ❄️, it’s limited, I know but I can’t help myself wanted to plant a few more seeds here and there etc….Thanks 🙏 🇨🇦

  • I keep my refrigerator at 34 deg. F and found 2 sleeves of garlic that started sprouting just a few days ago. Is it worth giving it a go and planting them? Some factors to consider, I live in zone 9a (Henderson NV) yesterday we topped out over 70 deg. F for the high and lows are from the mid 40’s to 50’s. The garlic is store bought product of Mexico purchased at La Bonita Supermarket. I figure it may be worth a try because it is hardy enough that it sprouted in the cold dark refrigerator at near freezing temperatures and if I plant it now it should be able to establish roots (the bees are still active on my shrubs in the frond yard is how my weather is). First frost in my zip code is Dec 10 and last frost Feb 10. I in no way think I’d get a super big bulb harvest out of it, but I think it may be an opportunity to temper the garlic for some excellent future harvests. Please give me your thoughts on this, going to plant it today, I’m thinking I should also be sure and plant it with the sprouts above the soil and hope it roots. Any advise is appreciated, my first planting. I also have some organic cloves in the freezer on Nov 11 hoping to plant them around Dec 20 or so. Thanks again.

  • hey, please let me know if romaine lettuce or broadleaf mustard would be good along side garlic..and thnx alot man, im abt to start growing veggies on roof top n have been perusal alot of ur articles n they have been realy helpful n source of knowledge fr me who has never done any farming stuff ever…keep up the goodwork..

  • Binging on your garlic growing articles since I’m a first timer, so first off thanks so much …love your approach and gardening presentation. My question is that some of your other articles state a good 1x watering or monthly/bi weekly depending on climate. Most all the companion plantings listed here require weekly watering. I’m in 9b Central FL and am 8wks into vernalization (I think maybe 1 more week to go to hit daily mid 70s before I plant the garlic) and watched your warm weather garlic article as well. 1) Do you think that’s too soon, or should I wait few more weeks for daily high of 60s? 2) I want to plant garlic into my existing carrot, greens and radish beds but those get weekly and sometimes 2x a Wk waterings. Will all that water rot them out, or should I just plant separately at this stage? Much appreciated

  • According to Growveg ( who base compa ion plant recommendations only on peer reviewed studies) Garlic and Strawberries do get along….I am guessing garlic serves as a pest detterrant in this case. Could you please share any further info of how garlic stunts growth of Strawberries? With so many conflicting info on companion planting…it really gets confusing.