June 2008 - While we were out walking at Keyhaven, I happened to notice large amounts of Crow Garlic
What is Crow Garlic?
Allium Vineale - related to onions, garlic, leeks and of course, Ramsons, this plant is common in grassy places such as roadsides and field edges, as well as banks and dunes near the sea, generally favouring sunny locations, usually on fairly light, free-draining or sandy soil.
I have been unable to find any definitive source or reasoning for the word Crow in the common name, however, it may be a corruption of the first syllable of klobalouh, which is the Old High German word for garlic.
The leaves are slender and tubular - like chives, for which they are often mistaken - the difference being that Crow Garlic leaves are slightly corrugated and more of a greyish-green colour than chives.
One rather odd thing about this plant is that some local varieties produce no flowers or seeds at all, but in their place, form a tight cluster of maroon coloured (later fading to straw colour) miniature bulbs - called aerial bulbils - as depicted above. In fact, this isn't an uncommon phenomenon in the genus Allium, or indeed in the whole of the lily family, to which they belong.
It is not unusual for the aerial bulbils to sprout and begin growing slender shoots while still attached to the parent plant (see the photo at the bottom of this column for an example of this).
Because it grows amongst tall grass, the plant is easily overlooked, although the seed (or bulb) heads are carried on tall, stiff, wiry stems - as seen here, growing on a bank next to the Hurst ferry at Keyhaven.
Picking Crow Garlic
The plant has a distinctive onion/garlic smell - all parts may be eaten.
The early leaves are soft and can be picked by hand, but the flower/bulb stems are tough and fibrous - and are best cut with scissors or a knife, rather than pulled off - as pulling may uproot the bulb, or break apart the cluster of bulbils.
Cut stems, along with their bulbil clusters can be stored for weeks standing in a glass or vase with a little water - ready to use a little here and there as you need them.>
