How to Grow Garlic: A Beginner’s Guide to Planting, Growing & Harvesting Big Bulbs

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Growing garlic is one of the most rewarding crops you can add to your garden. It’s low maintenance, cold hardy, and stores beautifully for months. If you’re gardening in a colder climate (like Zone 5 in Upstate New York), garlic is especially reliable when planted in the fall.

Here’s your complete guide from planting to curing.

How to grow garlic step-by-step guide with freshly harvested garlic bulbs on a clean neutral background.
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Step-by-step guide on how to grow garlic, featuring freshly harvested homegrown garlic bulbs.

Why Grow Garlic?

  • Easy to grow
  • Cold hardy
  • Pest resistant
  • Long storage life
  • Better flavor than store-bought

Plus, homegrown garlic bulbs are often larger and more flavorful than what you’ll find at the grocery store.


Types of Garlic

🧄 Hardneck Garlic

Best for cold climates (Zone 3–6)

  • Produces garlic scapes
  • Stronger flavor
  • Fewer but larger cloves
  • Stores 4–6 months

Hardneck varieties are ideal for colder regions because they tolerate freezing winters.


🧄 Softneck Garlic

Best for milder climates (Zone 6–9)

  • No scapes
  • More cloves per bulb
  • Stores 8–12 months
  • Great for braiding

If you want long storage life, softneck garlic is the way to go.


When to Plant Garlic

Fall planting is best.

Plant garlic 4–6 weeks before the ground freezes:

  • Northern climates: Late September–October
  • Milder climates: October–November

Garlic needs cold exposure (called vernalization) to form proper bulbs.


Green garlic plants growing in a mulched raised garden bed during the spring growing season.
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Garlic Growing in Raised Garden Bed

Where to Plant Garlic

Choose:

  • Full sun (6–8 hours daily)
  • Well-draining soil
  • Loose, rich soil with compost added

Avoid heavy clay or soggy areas.


How to Plant Garlic

  1. Break apart bulbs into individual cloves (leave skins on).
  2. Plant cloves pointy side up.
  3. Space 6 inches apart.
  4. Plant 2–3 inches deep.
  5. Mulch with 4–6 inches of straw or shredded leaves.

The mulch protects cloves over winter and prevents frost heaving.


Freshly harvested garlic scapes arranged in a rustic wooden basket in a backyard vegetable garden.
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A basket filled with freshly picked garlic scapes from the summer garden harvest.

Garlic Care Through the Seasons

Spring

  • Remove heavy mulch once growth begins.
  • Keep soil evenly moist.
  • Fertilize with a nitrogen-rich fertilizer early in the season.

Early Summer

If growing hardneck varieties:

  • Cut off garlic scapes once they curl.
  • This redirects energy into bulb growth.

When to Harvest Garlic

Garlic is ready when:

  • Lower 2–3 leaves turn brown
  • Upper leaves are still green

In most climates, harvest happens:

  • Late June–July

Gently loosen soil with a garden fork and lift bulbs carefully.


How to Cure Garlic

  1. Do NOT wash bulbs.
  2. Leave roots and stalks attached.
  3. Hang in a dry, shaded, well-ventilated area.
  4. Cure for 2–3 weeks.

After curing:

  • Trim roots
  • Cut stalks (or braid softneck types)
  • Store in a cool, dry place

Properly cured garlic can last 6–10 months.


Freshly harvested garlic bulbs laid out on a drying rack outdoors to cure in the sun.
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Homegrown garlic bulbs drying on a rack outdoors after harvest to prepare for long-term storage.

Common Garlic Growing Mistakes

  • Planting grocery store garlic (may not be suited to your climate)
  • Planting too shallow
  • Overwatering
  • Harvesting too early
  • Skipping mulch in cold climates

Bonus Tips for Bigger Bulbs

  • Choose large seed garlic cloves
  • Remove scapes promptly
  • Don’t over-fertilize late in the season
  • Rotate crops yearly (avoid planting after onions or other alliums)

Freshly harvested homegrown garlic bulbs in a wicker basket with a clean, neutral background.
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A beautiful basket filled with freshly harvested garlic bulbs ready for curing and storage.

Final Thoughts

Garlic is one of the easiest crops to grow, especially in colder zones. Plant it once in fall, and by summer you’ll be harvesting beautiful, flavorful bulbs that store for months.

If you have raised beds, garlic fits perfectly along the edges and between other cool-season crops.

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