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Swiss Chard Bright Lights Seeds

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Swiss Chard Bright Lights Seeds

Swiss Chard Bright Lights Seeds

Swiss Chard Bright Lights is a striking-looking plant with stems that vary in colour from red, pink, white, violet and golden yellow.

It looks fantastic in the garden or in containers and on your dinner plate. I saw it at RHS Wisley where they had planted up a raised brick wall around their coffee shop with rainbow chard. It looked stunning and very appropriate.

It is closely related to the beetroot family but is grown for its leaves rather than beetroot which is grown for its edible roots.

The colourful leaves & stems can be picked whilst young and used raw in salads or left to grow on and used in stir-fries o sauteed in butter (and it keeps its colour when cooked!).

Swiss Chard Bright Lights Vegetable Seed Information

Seed Quantity: Approx 100 seeds per pack.
Site:
Any, but does best if rich in organic matter.
When to Sow
March to August, but best in March or July/August.
How to Sow:
Either indoors in modules/small pots with 1-2 seeds per unit and remove the weaker seedlings. Transplant out when large enough in spring spacing 15-25cm apart. Or direct sow thinly once the soil has warmed up in April-July into drills 2.5cm deep by 30cm.
Care:
They must be kept watered in summer to prevent bolting, but if some do start to bolt just cut down the middle stem and give them a good water. Keep picking leaves to encourage new ones, and during winter take off old ones before they begin to rot & affect other leaves. Chard is not hardy but is tough enough to survive most winters, just cut off any mushy leaves and it will begin to re-grow when the weather warms up.
Harvest: 10 weeks after sowing, March sowings will be ready late May onwards & August sowings will be from October onwards. It is a biennial so it will last 2 seasons.

When to Sow Swiss Chard Bright Lights Vegetable Seeds

Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
Sow No Sow No Sow Yes Sow Yes Sow Yes Sow Yes Sow Yes Sow Yes Sow No Sow No Sow No Sow No
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$1.35
Swiss Chard Bright Lights Seeds
$1.35

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Description

Swiss Chard Bright Lights is a striking-looking plant with stems that vary in colour from red, pink, white, violet and golden yellow.

It looks fantastic in the garden or in containers and on your dinner plate. I saw it at RHS Wisley where they had planted up a raised brick wall around their coffee shop with rainbow chard. It looked stunning and very appropriate.

It is closely related to the beetroot family but is grown for its leaves rather than beetroot which is grown for its edible roots.

The colourful leaves & stems can be picked whilst young and used raw in salads or left to grow on and used in stir-fries o sauteed in butter (and it keeps its colour when cooked!).

Swiss Chard Bright Lights Vegetable Seed Information

Seed Quantity: Approx 100 seeds per pack.
Site:
Any, but does best if rich in organic matter.
When to Sow
March to August, but best in March or July/August.
How to Sow:
Either indoors in modules/small pots with 1-2 seeds per unit and remove the weaker seedlings. Transplant out when large enough in spring spacing 15-25cm apart. Or direct sow thinly once the soil has warmed up in April-July into drills 2.5cm deep by 30cm.
Care:
They must be kept watered in summer to prevent bolting, but if some do start to bolt just cut down the middle stem and give them a good water. Keep picking leaves to encourage new ones, and during winter take off old ones before they begin to rot & affect other leaves. Chard is not hardy but is tough enough to survive most winters, just cut off any mushy leaves and it will begin to re-grow when the weather warms up.
Harvest: 10 weeks after sowing, March sowings will be ready late May onwards & August sowings will be from October onwards. It is a biennial so it will last 2 seasons.

When to Sow Swiss Chard Bright Lights Vegetable Seeds

Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
Sow No Sow No Sow Yes Sow Yes Sow Yes Sow Yes Sow Yes Sow Yes Sow No Sow No Sow No Sow No
SaveSave