Rocket Wild
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Description
Wild Rocket Seeds | Salad Leaves
Intensely peppery, deeply flavoured, and ready to harvest in as little as three weeks. The salad leaf that supermarkets charge a premium for — and one of the easiest crops you will ever grow from seed.
There is a world of difference between the mild, watery rocket found in supermarket bags and the real thing grown fresh from seed. Diplotaxis tenuifolia — Wild Rocket — is a perennial species with narrow, deeply lobed leaves and a flavour that is genuinely bold: peppery, slightly bitter, with a warm, mustardy heat that intensifies as the leaves mature and again when the plant is allowed to flower. Once you have grown your own, the shop-bought version simply will not do.
Unlike annual salad rocket, Wild Rocket is a hardy perennial that will keep producing leaves year after year from the same plant. Cut it back and it regrows. Let it bolt and the pretty yellow flowers are edible too, with a milder flavour that makes a beautiful garnish. Sow it in a border, a raised bed, a patio container, or even a windowsill trough — and within weeks you will have a continuous, cut-and-come-again harvest that costs a fraction of what you would spend at the supermarket.
🌿 Understanding the Plant
Diplotaxis tenuifolia, commonly known as Wild Rocket, Perennial Wall Rocket, or Lincoln Weed, is a Hardy Perennial (H5) native to the Mediterranean region but thoroughly naturalised across the British Isles — you will often spot it growing from old walls and railway embankments. Unlike annual salad rocket (Eruca vesicaria), Wild Rocket is a true perennial that will persist and regrow from the same rootstock for several years, making it exceptional value from a single sowing.
The Flavour Difference: Wild Rocket is significantly more peppery and aromatic than annual rocket. The flavour compounds — primarily glucosinolates and isothiocyanates — are more concentrated in the narrow, lobed leaves of Diplotaxis, delivering the sharp, complex heat that makes rocket a sought-after ingredient in Italian cuisine. Young leaves harvested at 5–8cm are mildest; older leaves develop a more assertive bite that stands up beautifully to strong olive oil, Parmesan, and balsamic dressing.
Slower to Bolt: One of the great advantages of Wild Rocket over annual varieties is its significantly greater resistance to bolting. Where annual rocket rushes to flower at the first sign of heat or drought, Wild Rocket holds its leaf production through warmer weather far more reliably — making it a better choice for summer harvesting and for gardeners who cannot water every day.
Pollinator Bonus: When Wild Rocket does flower — producing clusters of small, bright yellow four-petalled blooms on tall stems — it becomes a valuable forage plant for bees and hoverflies. The flowers are edible with a mild, pleasant peppery flavour, and make a striking garnish for salads and summer plates.
🌱 Growing Guide
Wild Rocket is one of the most rewarding and forgiving crops to grow from seed — quick to germinate, rapid to harvest, and generous enough to keep giving all season long.
How to Sow:
Sow directly outdoors from March to September, or indoors on a sunny windowsill from February for an earlier start. Scatter seeds thinly into drills approximately 1cm deep and 20cm apart, or broadcast sow across a pot or container and rake in lightly. Keep the compost or soil consistently moist. Germination is fast — typically within 5–10 days in warm conditions.
Where to Grow:
Wild Rocket is highly adaptable and will grow well in full sun or partial shade. It prefers free-draining soil or compost and performs excellently in raised beds, patio containers, windowsill troughs, and growing bags. For the longest cropping window, avoid south-facing spots that bake in full afternoon sun — a little shade during the hottest part of the day keeps the leaves tender and delays bolting.
Cut-and-Come-Again Harvesting:
Begin harvesting when leaves reach 5–8cm in length, typically 3–5 weeks after sowing. Cut with scissors approximately 2–3cm above the base of the plant rather than pulling — the plant will regrow within 7–14 days, providing a fresh flush of leaves. A single sowing can yield four to six cuts before the plant's quality declines. For a continuous harvest, make a new sowing every 3–4 weeks from spring through to late summer.
Overwintering:
As a hardy perennial, established Wild Rocket plants will survive mild UK winters outdoors, especially with a little fleece protection or the shelter of a cold greenhouse or polytunnel. Plants that are allowed to overwinter often produce their most vigorous and flavoursome growth in early spring, before the season's first outdoor sowing has even germinated.
📋 Plant Specifications
| Botanical Name | Diplotaxis tenuifolia |
| Common Name | Wild Rocket / Perennial Rocket / Wall Rocket |
| Plant Type | Hardy Perennial (grown as cut-and-come-again salad crop) |
| Hardiness | H5 — Hardy in most UK gardens; overwinters with minimal protection |
| Light Requirements | Full Sun / Partial Shade ⛅ |
| Plant Height | 20–30cm (leaves); up to 60cm when in flower |
| Spacing | Thin to 15–20cm apart, or grow as dense cut-and-come-again |
| Days to First Harvest | Approximately 21–35 days from sowing |
| Harvest Period | March to November (year-round under cover) |
| Flavour Profile | Intensely peppery, mustardy, slightly bitter — bolder than annual rocket |
| Seeds per Packet | Approximately 1,000 seeds |
| Perfect For |
Cut-and-Come-Again Salad Beds
Patio Pots & Windowsill Troughs
Pizza, Pasta & Italian Cooking
Year-Round Harvesting Under Cover
Bee-Friendly Edible Flowers
|
🤝 Beautiful Garden Combinations
Wild Rocket is a natural companion in the kitchen garden — these plants from our range grow happily alongside it and make excellent partners on the plate too:
- 🌿 Basil Classic Italian: The Italian Kitchen Pair. Rocket and basil are the twin pillars of Italian summer cooking — and they make equally good companions in the garden. Both thrive in warm, well-drained conditions and can be grown together in the same container or raised bed. Harvest them simultaneously for the perfect bruschetta or summer pasta topping, or scatter both over a pizza fresh from the oven.
- 🌼 Borage: The Edible Flower Companion. Borage and rocket make one of the most beautiful edible pairings in the kitchen garden. Both are fast-growing, both attract pollinators, and both produce edible flowers — the starry blue borage blooms alongside the small yellow rocket flowers creating a stunning garnish platter straight from the garden. Borage also improves the flavour of nearby plants and is a traditional companion for brassica crops, which rocket belongs to.
- 🍅 Tomato 'Alicante' (coming soon): The Classic Salad Garden. Rocket and tomatoes are one of the great summer salad marriages — and growing them together in a raised bed or large container is deeply satisfying. The peppery heat of the rocket cuts through the sweetness of ripe Alicante tomatoes beautifully, and both crops can be harvested simultaneously from midsummer onwards for the freshest possible lunch straight from the garden.
📅 Sowing & Harvesting Calendar
Sow direct from early spring for fast, peppery leaves ready to harvest in as little as three weeks — and keep sowing every month for a continuous cut-and-come-again supply right through to autumn.
| Jan | Feb | Mar | Apr | May | Jun | Jul | Aug | Sep | Oct | Nov | Dec | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 🌱 Sow | ||||||||||||
| ✂️ Harvest |
The secret to a continuous rocket harvest is little and often. Rather than sowing a whole packet at once, make a small sowing every 3–4 weeks from March through to August. Each sowing will give you 4–6 cuts over 6–8 weeks before the quality declines — and by the time one batch is past its best, the next is ready to step in. Wild Rocket will also keep producing under a cold frame or unheated greenhouse well into November and beyond.
🏆 Grow Your Own, Taste the Difference
Freshly cut Wild Rocket from your own garden has a depth of flavour and peppery heat that shop-bought leaves simply cannot match — because it has never spent a day in a chilled lorry or a plastic bag. Diplotaxis tenuifolia is one of the fastest, most rewarding, and most cost-effective crops you can grow from seed, and as a true perennial it will keep paying dividends year after year from a single packet.
Delivery & Returns
Delivery:
Delivery to mainland UK is calculated at checkout. For all other areas and large orders please ask for a quote. Orders will be sent by express next day delivery (DPD). They will be dispatched on a next working day service, with the exception of Ireland where it may take two days. Please allow up to 48 hours for delivery in the UK as the couriers may have already been and collected on the day you send your order in. Smaller orders for pouches, pockets, bags and pots may be sent via Royal Mail delivery. Please ensure you supply an email address and a mobile so you can be updated about your delivery. Should you have any problems with your delivery, please contact us at sales@naturalgrower.co.uk.Special Deliveries
Saturday or weekday morning deliveries can be arranged, but there will be a surcharge. Please contact us to request a price for either of these delivery services. If you need a parcel sending outside of the UK, please contact us for a quote.Returns:
If you are not completely happy with any product that you have ordered from us, you may return it to us in its original condition any time within 14 calendar days from the date of dispatch. Products must be returned in their original condition. Please contact us at sales@naturalgrower.co.uk to arrange a return. If you return a product by post, you will need to pay the costs of returning the product to us and obtain proof of posting.Be a smarter gardener
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Organic fertilisers are broken down slowly by organisms in the soil to produce a more measured, consistent, natural release of nutrients. This results in uniform growth with strong stems and leaves, unlike chemical fertilisers which provide a sudden boost resulting in tall lanky plants. Stronger plants are more resistant to disease, and with the presence of mycorrizhal fungi to strengthen the roots, the plants, soil and fungi all work together long-term to create the perfect natural eco-system.
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