That would be a bubil, a tiny onion, most often seen on Egyptian Walking Onions. The flower heads bend down, due to weight, and the bulbils plant themselves, giving the "walking" effect of the plant moving around.
You may not have Egyptian walking onions, and these may not perform as described, but these are likely to be tiny onions. Egyptian walkers are the variety that displays this most often.
Garlic also produces bulbils and some people eat them. You could try eating these——or plant a few.
That would be a bubil, a tiny onion, most often seen on Egyptian Walking Onions. The flower heads bend down, due to weight, and the bulbils plant themselves, giving the "walking" effect of the plant moving around.
You may not have Egyptian walking onions, and these may not perform as described, but these are likely to be tiny onions. Egyptian walkers are the variety that displays this most often.
Garlic also produces bulbils and some people eat them. You could try eating these——or plant a few.