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End of season Sale! 50% off all seeds, stickies and magnets, and 10% off all prints and mugs!
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Bulls Blood Beets

$2.99 USD

Seed Count: Approx. 100 Seeds

Days to Maturity: 35 days for greens, 50-60 Days for roots

Description: Bulls Blood beets boast brilliant, deep, rich, blood red foliage.  Its young tender leaves are great added to salads.  Plus, its mature, 16 in. leaves are delicious sauteed, which is my favorite way to enjoy them.  Its sweet red roots are delicious and versatile harvested when still young, around 2-3 inches, and can be roasted, baked, boiled, or pickled.  Bulls Blood beet roots are a dark maroon color with inner magenta colored rings. This beet is pretty heat and cold tolerant, easy to grow, and its color intensifies, while it matures.

How To Grow

Sowing:  Sow beet seeds in well-worked, well drained soil in full sun. Beets are sensitive to acidic soils and prefer a pH of 6.0 – 7.0. If your soil is more acidic, add Garden Lime as directed on the bag. Sow thinly, in rows 12 inches apart and cover with ½ inch of fine soil. Seedlings emerge in 14-21 days. Thin to about 3" apart, when seedlings are 1-2" tall. Beet seeds are actually clusters of seeds and require more thinning than other crops.

Growing:  Keep plants well watered during dry periods to promote uninterrupted growth. They need about 1 inch of water a week. If you water with overhead sprinklers, water early in the day so the foliage has time to dry off before the evening, to minimize disease problems. Avoid fertilizer that is high in nitrogen. A basic 5-5-5 fertilizer is sufficient for good beet root and beet green development.

Harvesting:  Bulls Blood beets also produce lovely and tasty deep red tops that mature in 35-40 days. One-third of the tops can be harvested without damaging the plant. Harvest roots at about 1-2 inches for baby beets, up to 3 inches for mature beets. Cook beet greens like spinach, or saute in butter and garlic for a tasty treat. Beet roots can be pickled, grilled, baked, or boiled. Beet plants must weather the winter, in order to produce seed. In warmer climates, simply mulch the plants. In cooler climates, dig up the roots and store them in sand, without the roots touching each other, in a cool and humid location.  Then plant them again early spring. The plants will soon go to seed; wait until the seed heads are fully grown and dry before removing them, and store the seeds for up to 5 years.