Spring Onion · Adelaide, SA
When to plant spring onionin Adelaide.
Adelaide’s mediterranean/temperate climate gives you a specific window for spring onion. Here’s the exact timing, spacing, family-of-4 quantities, and what to plant alongside it.
The short answer
Plant year-round; best feb-may, aug-nov in Adelaide.
Climate zone: Mediterranean/Temperate · Frost risk: Frost-free (plains), light frosts July-August in Hills · Time to harvest: 60-80 days
Planting window
Year-round; best Feb-May, Aug-Nov
Spacing
5 cm apart
15 cm between rows
Sun & water
Full sun to partial shade
Water: Regular, keep consistently moist
Family of 4
Maintain a row of 20-30 plants at various stages; succession sow every 3-4 weeks
Growing spring onion in Adelaide: the specifics
Adelaide shares Perth's Mediterranean climate but with slightly cooler winters and a more distinct spring growing season. Hot, dry summers can exceed 40°C during heatwaves, while winters are mild with reliable rainfall. The Adelaide Hills just east of the city experience noticeably cooler conditions with light frosts, while the plains and coastal suburbs rarely frost. Spring and autumn are Adelaide's gardening goldilocks zones, warm enough for most vegetables, cool enough for quality harvests. For spring onion, the productive window in Adelaide is year-round; best feb-may, aug-nov. Within that window, Spring onions are the workhorses of the raised bed garden, compact, fast, and multi-purpose. They can be grown as a long-term crop (pulling individual plants as needed) or as a short-term succession crop for continuous harvest. Sow seeds 1-2cm deep in rows 15cm apart, with 5cm spacing within rows. Alternatively, buy bundles of seedlings at the nursery and plant them directly. Spring onions tolerate close spacing well and can be grown more densely than most vegetables without competition. Succession sow every 3-4 weeks for continuous harvest. The fastest harvest comes from buying seedling bundles and planting direct; seed-sown plants take 60-80 days but provide a more cost-effective ongoing supply. To regrow spring onions after harvest, leave 3-4cm of the white base in the ground, new shoots will emerge within a week or two. Alternatively, place the cut bases in a glass of water on a windowsill and transplant the regrown sections. Spring onions are outstanding companion plants when interplanted with carrots in alternating rows, their contrasting scents confuse both carrot fly and onion fly. Plant them along the edges of raised beds as a companion border. Feed lightly with a balanced fertiliser every 3-4 weeks. Spring onions are not heavy feeders but benefit from a topdressing of compost during the season. They are relatively pest and disease resistant compared to bulb onions.
Sizing it for your household
Maintain a row of 20-30 plants at various stages; succession sow every 3-4 weeks 1 plant per harvest; regrows 2-3 times after cutting. Plant Planner does this maths automatically once you tell it your household size, it’s the part most planners get wrong because they assume every household is the same.
The 5 cm spacing (with 15 cm between rows) means a standard 1.2 m × 2.4 m raised bed in Adelaide can hold 384 spring onion plants at maximum density, though in practice you’ll want to mix companions in, so plan for roughly 60-70% of that.
Companion plants for Adelaide
Good companions for spring onion include Carrot, Lettuce, Tomato, Beetroot. In Adelaide’s mediterranean/temperate climate, these pairings reduce pest pressure and improve pollination. Keep spring onion away from Beans, Peas, they fight for the same nutrients or attract shared pests.
Adelaide-specific tips
- Adelaide's extreme summer heatwaves (40°C+) can kill vegetable plants within hours, keep shadecloth on hand and water deeply the day before forecast heatwaves.
- The Adelaide Hills is its own microclimate, if you garden above 400m, treat your conditions more like Canberra and expect frosts from June to September.
- Adelaide's low summer rainfall means drip irrigation is essential, hand-watering raised beds in 38°C heat is exhausting and inefficient.
Common problems
Thrips cause silver streaking on leaves and can spread iris yellow spot virus, control with spinosad spray or reflective mulch. Onion leaf blight causes elongated lesions with dark borders, improve airflow and avoid overhead watering. Downy mildew appears as pale patches with furry growth, remove affected material. Snails and slugs eat young plants; use iron-based bait.
Harvest
Pull individual plants when they reach pencil-width or thicker. The entire plant is edible, white bulb, green stem, and even flowers. For a continuous harvest, pull alternate plants and allow the remainder to continue growing. Wash and use immediately or store upright in a glass of water in the fridge for up to a week.
Other mediterranean/temperate cities
Other allium for Adelaide
Frequently asked
When should I plant spring onion in Adelaide?
In Adelaide (mediterranean/temperate climate), plant spring onion Year-round; best Feb-May, Aug-Nov. Frost risk in Adelaide: Frost-free (plains), light frosts July-August in Hills.
How many spring onion plants does a family of 4 need?
Maintain a row of 20-30 plants at various stages; succession sow every 3-4 weeks. Expected yield per plant: 1 plant per harvest; regrows 2-3 times after cutting. Plant Planner does this calculation automatically based on your exact household size.
How much space does spring onion need in a Adelaide raised bed?
Spring Onion needs 5cm between plants and 15cm between rows. For a family of 4, allow enough bed area to fit the plants noted above with that spacing.
How long does spring onion take to grow in Adelaide?
Spring Onion takes 60-80 days. Germination is 7-14 days. Adelaide's mediterranean/temperate climate can shift these windows by a week or two, particularly during the shoulder seasons.
What grows well with spring onion?
Good companions in Adelaide include Carrot, Lettuce, Tomato, Beetroot. Avoid planting next to Beans, Peas.