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Snoopy 04-09-2005 11:43 AM

Red Silverbeet
 

I'm talking about the stuff with the dark green leaf and the wide
white stem. Occasionally I've seen Red Silverbeet in the shops, the
same stuff but with a red stem.

Now I've managed to grow some Red Silverbeet myself. The problem is I
never planted it (all my silver beet is self seedled from last
season's crop) and I have never bought any (so it could not have got
into my garden via any self made compost). My question is, how did I
manage to grow it? Or is 'Red' not a different species? Could
there be something in the soil that has turned the silverbeet stalks
red?

TIA

SNOOPY


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LJ 04-09-2005 07:29 PM

I suspect that the original beets you planted were from hybrid seeds and the
"self-seeded" ones have reverted to a parent type.

"Snoopy (*is n)" te**yson@caverock.*et.*z wrote in message
...

I'm talking about the stuff with the dark green leaf and the wide
white stem. Occasionally I've seen Red Silverbeet in the shops, the
same stuff but with a red stem.

Now I've managed to grow some Red Silverbeet myself. The problem is I
never planted it (all my silver beet is self seedled from last
season's crop) and I have never bought any (so it could not have got
into my garden via any self made compost). My question is, how did I
manage to grow it? Or is 'Red' not a different species? Could
there be something in the soil that has turned the silverbeet stalks
red?

TIA

SNOOPY


--
Join the fight against aggressive, unrepentant
spammers 'china-netcom'. E-mail me for more
details

--




Mosfet 04-09-2005 08:13 PM

On Sun, 04 Sep 2005 22:43:08 +1200, (Snoopy) te**yson@caverock.*et.*z
(*is n) wrote:


I'm talking about the stuff with the dark green leaf and the wide
white stem. Occasionally I've seen Red Silverbeet in the shops, the
same stuff but with a red stem.

Now I've managed to grow some Red Silverbeet myself. The problem is I
never planted it (all my silver beet is self seedled from last
season's crop) and I have never bought any (so it could not have got
into my garden via any self made compost). My question is, how did I
manage to grow it? Or is 'Red' not a different species? Could
there be something in the soil that has turned the silverbeet stalks
red?



It's red algae.


Bill Ewing 04-09-2005 09:32 PM

On Sun, 04 Sep 2005 22:43:08 +1200, (Snoopy) te**yson@caverock.*et.*z (*is n)
wrote:


I'm talking about the stuff with the dark green leaf and the wide
white stem. Occasionally I've seen Red Silverbeet in the shops, the
same stuff but with a red stem.

Now I've managed to grow some Red Silverbeet myself. The problem is I
never planted it (all my silver beet is self seedled from last
season's crop) and I have never bought any (so it could not have got
into my garden via any self made compost). My question is, how did I
manage to grow it? Or is 'Red' not a different species? Could
there be something in the soil that has turned the silverbeet stalks
red?

TIA

SNOOPY


Better be careful or Redbaiter will label you a Commie.
Birds bring it. They pick up the seed 2 doors among then
poop in your garden.



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