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How to Plant and Grow Garlic: The Ultimate Guide

A hand is holding a bunch of garlic upwards with the bulbs pointing upwards.

Do you dream of delicious homegrown garlic, straight from your garden to the kitchen? Come learn how to successfully grow garlic at home! This post will cover everything you need to know to grow the best crop possible: when and how to plant garlic cloves, where to get seeds, tips for soil prep, our “secret soak”, disease control, and more.

The best news is: garlic is easy to grow in any climate. It even does well in pots, perfect for container gardens. The key is choosing the right type of garlic for your location, so we’ll talk about the difference between softneck and hardneck garlic varieties too. I hope this guide will help make all of your homegrown garlic dreams come true!

RELATED: If you’ve already planted your garlic and need tips on harvesting, curing, and storage, see How and When to Harvest Garlic for more detailed information. Also see how to preserve garlic here.

There are four braids of garlic on an outdoor patio table. There are two different varieties, one is white with burgundy red accents while the other is mostly white with an occasional purple streak. The bulbs start at the bottom of the braid and as you go towards the top it turns to garlic leaves.

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When to Plant Garlic


Garlic is cool-season crop which takes about 8 months to grow from seed (cloves) to harvest. Garlic is usually planted in the fall, sometime between late September to late November depending on your climate. Mid-October is a safe bet for most locations. See our planting calendars below for more information. They’re available for every growing zone!

After planting, the cloves should begin to sprout in the fall, and also start to establish their root systems. They’ll go dormant over the winter (in freezing climates), resume growth in the spring, and be ready to harvest early to midsummer.

If you miss the window for fall planting, you can also plant garlic cloves in late winter to early spring, as soon as your soil thaws enough to work. However, fall planted garlic will produce bigger, superior bulbs. Here on the Central Coast of California, we often wait to plant our garlic in late January to help avoid garlic rust, a persistent fungal disease in our area.


A planting calendar for Zone 8, it has many different vegetables lined up on the left side of the chart and all of the months of the year listed on the top of the chart. Each vegetable has different colored lines that correspond with when to start seeds inside, transplant outdoors, and plant seeds outside, along with corresponding last frost date and first frost date where applicable. The lines start left to right, showing what months you should do each particular task depending on the season and where you live.
Get free planting calendars for every USDA hardiness zone here


Where to Buy Garlic Seed


Garlic doesn’t grow from typical tiny garden seeds. Instead, garlic is grown by planting individual garlic cloves, just like the ones you peel and cook for dinner! Each single garlic clove that is planted will grow into a new large head or bulb of garlic with 5 to 12 paper-wrapped cloves.

Even though you won’t plant garlic until fall, it’s a good idea to plan ahead and buy garlic seed (cloves) in advance. Most online retailers do pre-orders for garlic during the summer, and will ship it out in late summer to early fall.

Some reputable places to buy garlic seed include Peaceful Valley, High Mowing Seeds, Botanical Interests or Adaptive Seeds to name a few. In addition to ordering online, garlic seed is sometimes available for sale at our local Farm Supply or Ace Hardware nursery thought the varieties are limited.

In a pinch, you can plant organic garlic cloves from the grocery store, but then you can’t choose varieties suited for your zone (stores usually sell softneck). If you do go this route, I emphasize: get organic! Non-organic produce is often irradiated or treated with sprouting inhibitors that can hinder success. Check your farmer’s market too. The garlic they sell locally should grow well in your region.


A hand holding a white bowl full of red-colored garlic cloves. There are green fluffy plants in the background.


Choosing Garlic Varieties to Plant


There are dozens of varieties of garlic to choose from. Inchelium Red, Music, German White, Creole, Spanish Roja, and California Early White are a few popular options. Some are more spicy or mild, better for storage, larger or smaller bulbs, or earlier-maturing. However, out of all of the many types, garlic will fall into one of two categories: hardneck or softneck (explained below). It’s essential to choose the right type for your climate!


A close up of a hand holding two different varieties of garlic, they both have their outer papery wrapping pulled off at the top but it is still connected to the bottom part of the bulb, splayed out in a slight star shape. The top bulb is dark burgundy red showing six exposed cloves. The bottom bulb of garlic is larger, it is white with redish tips and there are at least twelve exposed cloves. The background of the image is dark grey barnwood.
A softneck Inchelium Red (our favorite!) on the bottom, and a hardneck Moroccan Creole on top.


Softneck vs Hardneck Garlic


Here are a number of key differences between hardneck and softneck garlic varieties:

  • Climate: Hardneck varieties tend to thrive in regions with more harsh freezing winters. They require a greater period of vernalization, or prolonged exposure to cold temperatures. On the other hand, softneck varieties tend to do best in regions with significantly milder winters, like here on the Central Coast of California. Softneck garlic can grow and survive with some freezing temperatures though! Especially if provided a good deep layer of mulch for added protection.

  • Number of cloves: Softneck garlic varieties usually produce a larger bulb, with more individually-wrapped cloves inside. In contrast, hardneck garlic typically has fewer individual cloves, but each clove can be larger, with thinner skin that is easier to peel.

  • Storage Potential: Because softneck garlic cloves are so tightly wrapped, they have a longer shelf life: up to 9 months when cured and stored properly. On the more tender side, hardneck garlic has a shorter storage life, usually lasting only 3 to 4 months post-harvest and curing. Therefore, you’ll want to use it, re-plant some as seed, or preserve it within that time frame.

  • Scapes: Close to harvest time, hardneck garlic will grow an edible flowering stem called a garlic scape. Garlic scapes are like delicious garlic-flavored, long tender green beans – an awesome addition to pesto or any meal! Softneck garlic does not produce scapes.

For even more information, please see this guide: The Difference Between Softneck and Hardneck Garlic. It also explores the top 12 garlic varieties!


A hand holding a bunch of garlic scapes, they are long, green, and resemble a cross between a long green bean and a green onion. They are about a foot long and are whimsical and slightly curly in their appearance. There are a couple raised wooden garden beds in the background that have various plants in them, along with a couple ceramic pots with agave, succulents, and perennials mixed in throughout the image.


Preparing Garlic Seed to Plant


Once you have your garlic seed, carefully break apart the whole bulbs into individual cloves. Leave the papery cover on each clove though! Removing the paper can make the cloves rot more readily in the soil. It is recommended to break up the bulbs at least a day or two before planting to give them time to dry out.

If you have more seed than you can plant, select the largest cloves of garlic to plant! Big cloves are said to produce the largest bulbs.


Vernalization


Garlic requires a period of vernalization, or exposure to cold temperatures below 40 to 45°F for several weeks. This chilling period helps to stimulate strong root development, sprouting, and growth. Hardneck garlic varieties are especially dependent on vernalization, often requiring up to two months of cold exposure, though three to five weeks is usually adequate for most varieties.

In most places, vernalization happens naturally while the garlic is in the garden soil over the cold winter months. However, if you live somewhere with temperate winter weather, you can “fake” vernalization by putting your garlic seed cloves in the refrigerator for several weeks (I recommend at least a month) prior to planting to help ensure success.


Two hands are held together, palms facing upwards. Many cloves of garlic are in the upheld hands.


Soaking Garlic Cloves Before Planting (optional)


Prior to planting garlic, we typically soak our garlic cloves in a mixture of seaweed extract and baking soda. This optional step helps provide the garlic seed with additional nutrients and anti-fungal ingredients, helping to jump-start sprouting and fight disease! With this, our garlic always sprouts within just a matter of days.

To create a garlic clove soak, combine 1 Tbsp of baking soda and 2 Tbsp of liquid seaweed per gallon of water. Given the modest amount of garlic we plant (about two pounds of cloves) we only make a quarter of the recipe, using 3/4 teaspoon of baking soda and a ½ tablespoon of seaweed extract per quart jar of water. In a pinch, you can also use kelp meal instead of liquid seaweed extract – just double the amount.

Mix well, distribute into your soaking vessels of choice, and add the garlic cloves. Soak the garlic seed in this solution for several hours or even overnight, but no more than 18 hours. We keep each variety separate in it’s own marked container to keep track.

One final optional step is to give the garlic cloves a quick dunk in rubbing alcohol (just for a minute or two) prior to planting to help further kill any bacteria or fungal spores that may be present. This is particularly useful if you’re re-planting garlic harvested from your own garden, where the likelihood of disease may be higher than fresh seed garlic. 


Two quart mason jars filled with a kelp solution and many cloves of garlic soaking in each one. One jar contains garlic that is redish brown and the other is mainly creamy white. The jars are sitting on the edge of a raised garden bed where there are many greens such as tatsoi growing in it. The background shows a couple other raised garden beds and they contain many different varieties of greens. There is a hedge of perennials behind that which creates a green wall with spots of small pink flowers.
Soaking garlic cloves in kelp meal, baking soda, and water before planting.


Where to Plant Garlic


Garlic grows best in a location with full sun, or at least 6 hours of direct sunlight per day. If you’re not using raised garden beds, choose a spot in the ground that doesn’t easily collect and pool water, which can lead to rotting.

Avoid planting garlic in the same place year after year, or in the same location that other alliums like onions were recently grown. Good crop rotation practices are important to help prevent disease, pests, and nutrient deficiencies!

Garlic makes a great companion plant to grow near tomatoes, lettuce, carrots and members of the cabbage family, but isn’t as compatible to plant near peas or beans.


Soil Preparation


Garlic thrives in rich, loose, well-draining soil. If your soil is compact and dense, loosen it to about a foot deep and consider adding some potting soil, horticultural sand, and/or pumice to fluff it up.

Before planting, work in several inches of organic compost to your chosen planting location, along with a top dressing of slow-release organic fertilizer. Go fairly light on the fertilizer at the planting stage however, and plan to add more in the spring. 


An garden bed full of soil but no plants, with many small holes made in rows throughout the bed, ready to plant garlic. There are various cacti and perennials in the background and a bench next to a slender tree trunk.


Planting Depth and Spacing


Plant each garlic clove 2 inches deep, about 4 to 6 inches apart. I usually pre-poke all the planting holes in the designated bed, and then pop in each clove one by one.  Place the garlic clove in the hole with the flat root end down and the pointy end facing up.

For larger varieties like Elephant garlic (which is actually a member of the leek family), provide more spacing between the cloves – up to 12 inches apart, and 4 to 6 inches deep. Garlic seed companies should also include planting instructions with spacing guidelines for you to follow.


Two images of a hand holding garlic cloves, ready to plant. The first shows a hand holding one garlic clove with its root end facing down and its growth/sprout end pointing up, with the empty garden bed and soil in the background. The second image shows a hand planting the clove in the soil with its root end down and pointy end up.


Mulching Garlic


In cold northern climates, it’s important to apply several inches (4 to 6 inches) of loose deep mulch on top of the soil to protect garlic over winter. Straw, shredded leaves, grass clippings, and fluffy well-aged compost are all good mulch options. Apply the mulch before the first hard freeze. There is no need to remove the mulch in spring however – it will help to suppress spring weeds too!

Since we live in an area with mild but rainy winters (frost and hard freezes are rare here), we skip the deep mulch so the bulbs won’t stay soggy and accidentally rot. Instead, we apply just a modest layer (an inch or two) of compost mulch on top. Rather than going dormant, our garlic continues to slowly grow through winter.


A raised garden bed has many young greens sprouting out of its soil from planted garlic.
Young garlic just starting to sprout up. We use compost and a fine woody “soil building conditioner” as mulch in our raised beds.


Water

Garlic enjoys routine deep water, but not too much. Allow the top inch or two of soil to dry out between watering. If it’s raining, snowing, or otherwise damp in the winter, do not apply additional water. It’s important to not overwater so the bulbs won’t rot, especially when the garlic isn’t actively growing over winter! Once spring comes and temperatures rise, maintain the soil evenly moist but not soggy.


Fertilizer


Garlic is a fairly heavy feeder. Once things start to warm up in the spring, add a fresh layer of compost between the rows and/or a side-dressing of balanced slow-release organic fertilizer. This will give them some much-needed energy as they begin to fatten up! We also try to water our garden with either dilute seaweed extract or homemade compost tea a couple times throughout the summer growing season to support overall soil health.


A raised garden bed full of maturing garlic, the plants have long green strands of leaves and the main garlic bulb is hidden under the soil surface. There is an agave in a ceramic pot in the corner where there is another garden bed which contains tall spikes of fava bean greens that is teeing into the garlic raised bed. There are various trees and shrubs planted outside of the garden bed area in the background.


Growing Garlic in Pots


Garlic grows quite well in pots! In addition to raised garden beds, we’ve planted garlic in various containers over the years including in Earth Box planters, 15-gallon grow bags and half wine barrel planters.

To grow garlic in a pot, follow the same tips provided in this guide: use moderately rich but well-draining soil (such as quality potting soil), fertilize once at the time of planting and again in spring, provide full sun, routine water, and deep mulch during winter.

Ensure the container has excellent drainage since garlic will rot if the soil becomes water-logged. A simple moisture meter can help you determine how wet (or dry) the soil in your pot is before watering again.

FAQ: What size pot is best for garlic?

That depends on how much garlic you want to plant! Keeping in mind that garlic cloves should be spaced 4 to 6 inches apart, I recommend using a wide container with ample surface area (as opposed to a deep narrow pot) to maximize the number of garlic cloves you can plant. Garlic has fairly shallow roots (but needs to be planted 2 inches deep), so choose a pot that is at least 8 to 10 inches deep.


Two rectangular containers on a patio full of garlic growing, with large green leafy tops.
My friend Rose’s @little_rose81 hardneck garlic, grown in large containers in her Ontario Canada garden
Two rectangular containers on a patio full of garlic growing. One photo shows the garlic greens starting to turn yellow and die back, and the second photo shows the garlic bulbs have been harvested and laying on top of the soil, now with dried brown green tops.
Rose’s @little_rose81 potted garlic harvest


Garlic Diseases and Pests


Thankfully, most common garden pests prefer to stay away from garlic. In fact, garlic is often used as a companion plant to naturally deter pests instead! Aphids did attack our garlic crop one year, but that was only because the plants were already stressed (we forgot to turn on the automatic irrigation – oops!) and struggling plants are always more attractive to pests.

On the other hand garlic is prone to several diseases, including Basal Rot, White Rot, Downy Mildew, Botrytis Rot, Penicillium Decay and more. Cornell University explains that “most of the major garlic diseases are soil-born, so proper site assessment and yearly rotations are crucial in maintaining a healthy garden of garlic.” The only disease we’ve personally encountered is garlic rust.

Garlic rust is a fungal disease that only affects the allium family (garlic, onions, leeks, and shallots) and causes orange rusty-looking spots on the leaves. It is common in humid, damp conditions like we often have in the winter, and is virtually impossible to treat organically once it appears. Minor cases are mostly a cosmetic nuisance, but severe infections can lead to decreased bulb size and lessened life in storage.

Despite our best crop rotation efforts, we usually end up with some rust. If it’s really bad, we sometimes have to harvest our garlic early (resulting in green garlic) to prevent the spread of rust spores. Here in California, we’ve also learned that we can successfully prevent (or at least greatly reduce) garlic rust by planting our garlic in late January instead of fall!


A close up of garlic greens infected with garlic rust which covers the green leaves in red/orange spots.
A pretty severe case of garlic rust in our garden
A hand holding a bunch of immature green garlic my their stalks with the white round bulbs pointing upwards.
A harvest of immature garlic (aka green garlic) when the garlic rust was too bad to let it continue to grow. Learn all about ways to use and preserve green garlic here.


Harvest, Curing and Storage


Garlic is typically harvested in early to midsummer. Close to harvest time, the garlic leaves start to turn yellow or brown, shrivel, and dry up, and you can also feel developed bulbs below the soil. It’s important to stop watering garlic for a couple weeks prior to harvest, which helps it start to dry out for curing. After harvest, garlic should be cured for several weeks (with the green tops and roots still in tact) to prepare it for long-term dry storage.

Please visit our detailed guide on How to Harvest, Cure and Store Garlic for more information. It also includes some of our favorite ways to preserve garlic, such as making homemade garlic powder or fermented garlic honey.


A man who is wearing a maroon shirt, brown shorts, and sunglasses is holding two varieties of newly braided garlic. He is holding them outwards and up towards the camera. Each garlic braid contains about twenty four visible bulbs with many greenish brown leaves emanating from the tops of the bulbs which helps create the braid. There is a greenish blue wall of a house that is the background.


And that’s how to plant and grow garlic.


So, what do you think? Are you going to grow hardneck garlic, softneck, or maybe a little of both? I hope you found this article to be interesting and informative! Please feel free to ask questions in the comments below. May you be blessed with delicious homegrown garlic.


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DeannaCat's Signature, Keep on Growing

66 Comments

  • Brenna Saxton

    Thanks for this helpful guide! I’ve already braided a set of my garlic to store. For the rest, I’m planning to plant the cloves as seed for next year. Do I need to cure them first? I started with a batch from the store last fall, and didn’t bother to do anything but let them sprout in the dark first.

    • Aaron (Mr. DeannaCat)

      Hi Brenna, congratulations on your garlic harvest! You should dry and cure all of your garlic, afterwards, you can select which bulbs you would like to use for planting out for your next crop. Hope that helps and good luck!

  • Debra

    Thanks for the motivational article. I’m in Wyoming and I’ve heard a couple of people talking about growing garlic. It has baffled me because it grows under the snow, but I guess that would be similar to daffodils, which love it out here. I plan on building a dedicated small scale planter box for them. What do you suggest the depth should be? Always love reading your articles. Thanks!

    • Aaron (Mr. DeannaCat)

      Hi Debra, glad to hear you are thinking about growing garlic this season, a planter that is at least a foot deep should be more than deep enough to grow garlic. Hope that helps and we appreciate your support of Homestead and Chill!

  • Julie Piper

    Hi! This was such a great article, we are very excited to try as I have been wanting to grow garlic. So this might be a dumb question but, do you have to dry and cure the garlic for two weeks before you can use them or can you start using straight from pulling out?

    Thank you!

    • Aaron (Mr. DeannaCat)

      Hi Julie, yes you can start using a few bulbs before they are dried and cured, they just won’t have as long of a shelf life. Keep a few bulbs to use for the time being while you dry and cure the rest of your garlic, congratulations on your harvest and enjoy!

  • Sharon

    Hi. I was wondering about different seed company’s. My first time i order and got trash seeds called company and they said we will refund you. Never did. So last fall I just used grocery store ones. I want to try ordering but you can see from the last experience that I am nervous. All the companies you mentioned were good in past? Also I am not sure where to plant because of the space issue. I was going to plant in a flower bed that was different to rotate but this summer some of the plants there have terrible rust! This whole property I fight mold. So I am thinking where to now garden is so packed and we have wire grass here. How much space so you think I would need to plant 40-60 bulbs? Or how many grow pots?

    • Aaron (Mr. DeannaCat)

      Hi Sharon, we have never had any issues with any of the garlic seed from any of the companies that we highlight in this article. Garlic rust is an extremely difficult disease to fight, especially so if it is prevalent in your environment. We have weeds and grasses on our property that get rust and it is something that we struggle with when it comes to our leeks and garlic in particular and it is more or less a gamble when we plant those types of crops. As far as spacing goes, I would space your garlic seed about 6-8 inches from each other in all directions, we probably planted around 40-60 garlic cloves in one of our smaller 4×6 foot raised beds. Hope that helps and good luck!

  • Amy Homan

    You mentioned hardneck garlic requires prolonged exposure to cold weather, but you also said you have grown hardneck in your mild climate. Does it always produce? I’m wondering if I can try growing some in central North Carolina.

    • Aaron (Mr. DeannaCat)

      Hi Amy, we have successfully grown hardneck garlic in our mild climate but it helps to search out varieties that do well in more mild climates as well, check out our article on The Difference Between Hardneck and Softneck Garlic + Top 12 Varieties for information on specific varieties that may do well for you. We will usually store our garlic seed in the refrigerator for a few weeks before we plant it out which can aid in the vernalization of the seed as well. I think in central North Carolina you can successfully grow a few varieties of hardneck garlic. Hope that helps and have fun growing!

  • Phillip Andrews

    Just tried to post a question and it disappeared. Not sure if it went or not – trying again.
    First time growing garlic. Just harvested a bunch of scapes. Not sure of options other than freezing. Please help.
    Have been reading your posts for a couple of years and absolutely love it. Butternut squash soup is to die for. Still have a couple of quarts frozen from last year. Thanks for all of your info.

    • Aaron (Mr. DeannaCat)

      Hi Phillip, we are so glad you have been following along and we appreciate your support of Homestead and Chill! We recently harvested some garlic scapes and have been enjoying them in dinner most nights, we will typically chop one of the scapes up and add it to our sautéed veggies. They hold up quite well in the fridge as well so they will likely store well for over a week at least.

      I know a lot of people like making garlic scape pesto as well, however, we have yet to make it ourselves. Use them as you would any garlic or onion, the flavor is quit strong when eaten fresh but it calms down quite a bit once cooked, add them to mashed potatoes, pizza, sautéed veggies, really whatever you feel like making. Hope that helps and let us know how you ended up using and enjoying them, congrats on your harvest!

      • Liz

        Hi-It’s the end of June and my garlic was finally ready to be harvested. I’m so excited bc the bulbs are by far the biggest I’ve ever grown but I’m not sure what to plant in its place? All my other summer veggies are established. What kind of crop rotation do you recommend after garlic? Thanks for all the tips!

        • Aaron (Mr. DeannaCat)

          Hi Liz, congratulations on your garlic harvest, that is very exciting! Check out our article on How to Practice Crop Rotation (Benefits Explained) for more information but sowing some bush beans sounds like a good crop to follow up with as legumes are a good follow up crop to root veggies. Beans will also be a shorter and quicker crop that can be planted in succession throughout the rest of the growing season. Hope that helps and have fun growing!

  • Michelle

    Thank you so much for the great blog. It’s become a go to favorite of mine. I frequently share it in my garden groups on Facebook.

    I’m trying to figure out when to harvest my garlic. This is my first time growing it and it’s going reasonably well. I grew two types of hard necks, German and music.

    The tops of the plants have about 8 to 12 inches of brown yellow leaves and the leaves around the bases are shriveling. I stopped watering a week ago, but we’ve had a heavy rain since then.

    Today I pulled about 1/4 of my bed which was 22 plants. I’m wondering if I should wait another week?

    I’d love to be able to post a picture but I’m not sure how. Thanks for your help!

    • Aaron (Mr. DeannaCat)

      Hi Michelle, it sounds like your garlic is about ready to harvest then as the leaves should have browned by at least a third. How did the garlic look that you harvested? If the bulbs are nice and full then you should be good to go, if not, let the garlic stay in the ground for another week. Hope that helps and enjoy your garlic harvest.

        • Aaron (Mr. DeannaCat)

          Hi Monica, we like this one and we typically get it in the 1 gallon size and it can last for some time. We used it once a month on our tomatoes this year, only giving each tomato about 1/2 gallon of the dilute seaweed mixture (1 ounce liquid seaweed to 1 gallon of water) and they seemed to enjoy it quite a bit. Hope that helps and good luck!

  • Connie Stallings

    Thank you for this great article. Just harvested my garlic. We live in Texas so finding a cool room is hard.

  • Renee

    I believe my garlic is ready to harvest but where we are we just have tons of rain and storms in the forecast for a the entire week or so. Is it okay to still harvest after we just got a storm last night?

    • Aaron (Mr. DeannaCat)

      Hi Renee, I would try and wait around 5 days after your last rain to harvest your garlic. If you can only wait a few days then that should be okay too, however, the drier the bulbs are, the longer they will last in storage. If the forecast is set to clear after your bout of rain, you can wait until then, your garlic should still be fine if you leave it in the ground for an extra week or so. Hope that helps and let us know how your harvest turns out.

      • Tyler

        Hi! I love your blog! Thank you! We planted garlic for the first time in the Fall of 2021. Nothing came up in 2022 Spring and so we planted over them with peas. When we started our 2023 Spring planting, we were greeted with rows of seemingly perfect garlic plants. Have you ever heard of that? Do you think they will taste okay?

        Best,

        Tyler

        • Aaron (Mr. DeannaCat)

          Hi Tyler, well that’s a surprise! We typically see garlic sprouts within weeks of planting the cloves so I can’t say why they would have taken so long to sprout, I would maybe sacrifice one of the garlic sprouts and pull it out of the soil to inspect the clove/bulb. If it looks good and you all want to grow garlic where it is, let it grow and see how it turns out, if you are in a climate with freezing winters, you may be up against the clock to harvest the garlic before it is fully mature in the fall. Hope that helps and we appreciate your support of Homestead and Chill, thanks for reading!

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