The Plant Store is now closed for 2023 and will re-open for sales in May of 2024

  • Please see the Using the Plant Library  page  for some tips on how to make the most of the information here to select species for creating a healthy native plant community suited to the conditions of your site.

Allium cernuum, Nodding Onion

Allium cernuum

Nodding Onion

  • Full sun to light shade
  • Medium wet to medum dry soil
  • 18" to 24" tall, 4" to 8" spacing
  • Ontario Native, Beginner Friendly, Happy in meadows and open woodlands, as well as cultivated gardens.

A summer flowering Onion, native to sunny, dry sites in Ontario.

These came to the Perth gardens from two sources, a couple of pots from a native plant nursery near Peterborough and the rest grown from seed from Gardens North.

The ones from the nursery had multiplied through offsets enough after three years that, when I lifted and separated them last spring, there were roughly 25 individual plants between the two clumps. The seed grown ones, which weren’t coddled at all (poor things were left growing in a tight clump for their entire first year) began blooming last summer, at about 3 years of age. I suspect that they would have matured earlier with a bit more space at the start.  Either way, these mature and spread more quickly than some other Ontario members of the Allium family.

Their nodding umbels of pink flowers are popular with bees. While I haven’t caught the moment on camera, I’ve seen big fuzzy bumblebees dangling from their little blooms on more than one occasion.

Very early to emerge, their greens can add a bit of spring to in the kitchen as soon as the snow melts in the garden.

If they are in a location where they are happy and free to self-seed, this is a species that could sustain light foraging more readily than, the so often over harvested, wild leeks.

They grow to around 18” tall and are often recommended for rock gardens but will thrive in any well drained, or even dry, sandy loam site with plenty of sunshine. Neighbours that would enjoy a similar setting include Lanceleaf Coreopsis, Orange Butterfly Weed, Silverweed, Grey Goldenrod, Heath Aster, Pearly Everlasting, Rudbeckia hirta. Lewis' Wild Blue Flax, Prairie Smoke, Blue Eyed Grass, Little Bluestem and Junegrass.


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Species that were not sown / aren't being sown for 2023 are marked with an * 
Species that are native to this continent, but not historically native to Ontario are marked with a ~ 
While it rarely comes up, I do reserve the right to limit plant quantities, mostly to help ensure that as many native plant gardens as possible become a reality
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