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I dig up and divide some Society garlic. Basically there is a single giant tuber under a clump of society garlic connecting the whole plant together. Of course, planting multiple plants will result in multiple tubers under the clump. So I show you how I do it and update you on the planting from the previous video and my other Society garlic plants. Is there anything else to do with Society garlic you'd like me to address? Presently I have Society garlic seeds for sale on my eBay account: https://www.ebay.com.au/usr/mbyseeds I don't ship to Western Australia, Tasmania or overseas. Other sellers may. I wanted to ship some...plantlets? - in an envelope rather than in a parcel so I wanted smaller pieces only to stay under 20mm in width. Where I could, I took smaller bits off but I left the bigger bits where I thought I'd damage them too much if I chopped them up and of course just replanted the bigger bits. . The plants I posted arrived after 8 days (back in spring) and are going well. Oh – and they came in under 20mm thick. Hopefully they will be established at my mate's place before winter. He's in Canberra and apparently Society garlic can deal with frosts down to -5 degrees once they are established. I have no first-hand experience but a lot of sources are in consensus about -5 degrees. In cold climates you could start them in pots any time of the year and plant out in spring. And I don't know if it's technically a tuber or a rhizome under the Society garlic. Usually it's referred to as a tuber. I'm not so sure how to describe the individual stems – could they be plantlets? For the curious at 1:34 that's the base of an Opioid lettuce – Lactuca virosa – that I remove. It had flowered once and they often re-shoot from the base when it dies back after flowering – but sometimes the whole plant dies. I hope you enjoy the video. If you'd like to support the channel you can buy me a coffee: https://buymeacoffee.com/mybackyardyt