Bright Lights Swiss Chard

Bright Lights Swiss Chard

Individual Plant
$4.00
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Bright Lights Swiss Chard

Bright Lights Swiss Chard

$4.00
Pack Size

Bright Lights Swiss chard is a vibrant, multicolored heirloom variety featuring glossy, dark green to bronze leaves that are lightly savoyed (crinkled) and form upright rosettes, paired with thick, colorful stems in a rainbow of shades including gold, pink, orange, red, violet, white, and striped combinations. The leaves and stems are tender with a mild, earthy flavor that's slightly sweet and less bitter than many greens, offering a pleasant, spinach-like taste with good texture when young. It's highly versatile: harvest baby leaves for fresh salads or garnishes, sauté mature leaves and stems with garlic and olive oil, wilt into soups, pasta, or stir-fries, steam as a side, or use in smoothies, quiches, and gratins for added nutrition and visual appeal. This variety is an excellent pick for Utah per USU Extension recommendations—it's cold-tolerant for early spring and fall crops, heat-tolerant with shade in summer, slow to bolt, and produces reliably in our variable climate with fertile, well-drained soil, making it ideal for extended-season sales or nursery stock. It's great for containers.

Days to Maturity: Approximately 50-60 days from transplant to full harvest (baby leaves ready in 30-45 days).

Sun Needs: Full sun to partial shade (4-6+ hours of direct sun ideal); in Utah's hot summers, afternoon shade helps prevent bolting and keeps leaves tender.

Season Type: Cool-season crop; best planted early spring (as soon as soil is workable, around 40°F+) or late summer for fall/winter harvest; tolerates light frosts and can overwinter with protection.

Plant Habit & Support: Upright rosettes 12-20 inches tall and wide; no support needed—space 8-12 inches apart for full plants or closer (4-6 inches) for cut-and-come-again baby greens.

Other Notes: Bolt-resistant and heat-tolerant relative to many greens; watch for aphids, leaf miners, slugs, or downy mildew—good airflow, consistent moisture, and organic mulch (like straw or compost) reduce risks; prolific with regular harvesting, perfect for succession planting every 2-3 weeks.

Best Planting Method: For earlier production in Utah's cool seasons, use transplants started indoors 3-4 weeks ahead and set out when soil is workable—space appropriately in beds or rows. Amend soil with compost for fertility and excellent drainage; raised beds help in heavier or alkaline Utah soils to prevent water issues. Organic mulch (such as straw, compost, or grass clippings) around plants retains moisture, moderates temperature, and suppresses weeds.

Watering Needs: Keep soil consistently moist but not waterlogged (1-2 inches per week)—even moisture prevents bitterness, bolting, or tip burn; drip irrigation or base watering keeps foliage dry in dry Utah conditions. Mulch aids moisture retention during warmer periods; containers dry quicker, so monitor frequently for steady supply.

Fertilization Needs: Incorporate compost or balanced organic fertilizer at planting for nutrient-rich soil. Swiss chard is a moderate feeder—apply a light nitrogen-rich side-dressing (like compost tea or fish emulsion) midway if leaves pale or growth slows, but avoid excess to prevent soft, pest-prone foliage. Harvest outer leaves regularly for cut-and-come-again (encourages ongoing production) or cut whole plants at the base when mature; frequent picking maintains quality and extends the harvest window before any bolting.

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