How to Grow Swiss Chard

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Swiss Chard
Swiss chard is a neat plant that grows well among other vegetables as it is doing in this raised planter.
Full size Swiss Chard should be ready 2 months after planting
Plants reach full size in about two months, but its tender outer leaves can be harvested anytime they are large enough to eat.
Swiss Chard and Pansies
Swiss chard is a perfect colorful companion for pansies in a flower bed, adding color and texture in cool weather.
Swiss Chard growing in a container
Swiss chard is also great in containers, either strictly for ornament or for harvest when you are ready to eat.
Cut Swiss Chard Leaves
Harvest large leaves by cutting them from the outer part of the plant at the base of their stems.
Swiss Chard after cutting.
When harvesting, leave smaller leaves in the center of the plant to grow.

Colorful stems and bright green leaves make Swiss chard is the single most glamorous garden green as well as a nutritious vegetable. Because it does not ship well, you are not likely to find it at the grocery store. The only way to have beautiful leaves like this is to grow your own. Fortunately, it is easy to grow in the ground or in containers and is one of the few greens that tolerates both cool weather and heat. It will linger in the spring garden much longer than mustard, turnips, arugula, and other greens that bolt in spring. In the fall, it grows well until killed by a hard freeze.

Planting and Care

Set out transplants two to four weeks before the date of the last frost in spring. A spring planting will go on producing through spring, summer, fall until a hard freeze kills it.

For fall plantings, set out transplants just about anytime in late summer when they begin appearing at your favorite garden center. Plants tolerate heat well as long as you keep them properly watered.

Swiss chard grows best in rich, moist soil with a pH between 6.0 and 6.8. Plant in fertile soil because plants should grow fast to produce tender leaves. Work nitrogen-rich amendments such as blood meal, cottonseed meal, feather meal, or composted manure into the ground before planting. Or, apply a timed-release vegetable food such as 14-14-14 according to label directions.

Space transplants at the distance given on the Bonnie label. If you don’t have the label, a good general spacing is about a foot apart. After planting, water the transplants well and apply a liquid starter fertilizer.

Like all vegetables, Swiss Chard does best with a nice, even supply of water. Water regularly, applying 1 to 1.5 inches of water per week if it doesn’t rain. You can measure the amount of water with a rain gauge in the garden. Mulch with compost, finely ground leaves, wheat straw, or finely ground bark to keep the soil cool and moist and to keep down weeds. Mulching will also help keep the leaves clean.

Do water regularly, especially in summer, as drought stressed plants may bolt, or flower.

Harvest and Storage

Leaves are the sweetest and most tender in the cool of early spring and fall.

You can begin harvesting outer leaves anytime that they are large enough to eat; young tender leaves are the most flavorful and make a colorful addition to salads. If picked one or two leaves at a time, a spring planting of six to twelve plants will yield plenty of leaves into winter. Cut out the midrib of larger leaves before cooking or chopping into salads. Chop large leaves to cook down like spinach or in casseroles, soups, and pasta.

In areas that never experience a hard freeze, Swiss chard sometimes behaves like a perennial, living for several years. When it blooms, you can cut off the bloom stalk and it will produce more leaves.

Whole harvested leaves will keep in the refrigerator for about two weeks in a loose plastic bag or sealed container.

Troubleshooting

Plants are generally problem-free, but may be attacked by aphids, mites, and caterpillars that chew holes in the leaves. Swiss chard is also subject to cercospora leaf spot, a disease that disfigures the leaves with ash-gray spots that have purple edges; or leaves may get downy mildew, which causes a mildew-like growth on the foliage.


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