
Planting, Growing, and Harvesting Rhubarb
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Types
These common varieties have attractive red stalks and excellent growers:
- ‘Canada Red’
- ‘Crimson Red’
- ‘MacDonald’
- ‘Valentine’
In addition to the previous four, there is a reliable, green-stalked cultivar named:
- ‘Victoria’
Cooking Notes
Check out our list of best rhubarb recipes to put your fresh rhubarb to good use! Plus, learn how to make a rhubarb tonic.
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Try mulching with straw and keeping the roots warm during the cold months. They need lots of sun. I have read an old method of making your Rhubarb grow longer and it worked for me. Get a dark container (an old pot so it fits over the rhubarb plant) when you see first signs of plant growing cover plant completely. In the dark they seem to want to grow. Check from time to time. If you have a container with a lid on it cut the bottom out and put over with lid on top when it is nearly at the top take the lid off and it will continue to grow longer. I have comfrey growing next to mine and throw the spent leaves next to Rhubarb to help with fertilising. Hope this helps.
I've seen old cars buried behind barns and just about anything one can imagine. Some farmers used to spray around the barn quite heavily for flies or would use that spot to dump all kinds of waste oil, gasoline used to wash engine parts, etc. You could possibly have picked a toxic location.
Does the rhubarb have the direct sunlight and water it needs?
You could try mulching it good in the late fall with compost to see what happens or move some dormant split roots to a new location.
I don't have a good sunny spot to grown rhubarb in the ground, but am wondering if it will do okay in a pot that can be placed in a sunny location?
I decided to try my hand at growing rhubarb this year so I took a 55 gallon plastic drum that we used to use for rain water collection, cut it to about 30" tall, drilled drain holes in the bottom and filled with potting soil. A co-worker gifted me a piece of root from her established plant and I just put it in the new planter and hoped for the best. in less then 2 months I went from 1 small sickly looking leaf (that died off pretty quickly) to a barrel full of good, thick stalks. I will admit that I am not the best at watering it all the time, but we have had a rather wet year so that has helped... and my plant gets full sunlight for about 3/4 of the day. Thinking of getting another root and using the top half of the barrel that I cut off for a second planter in the future... I can't wait until next year where I can start harvesting!
Yes you can grow rhubarb in a pot. I found out accidentally. I bought two more plants but before I could plant them I broke my leg. I had a large pot, 24-30" across which was prepared for flowers. I ended up planting them in the pot thinking I might be able to plant them in the ground the next year. The pot is at the north east corner of my house so it gets sun but also shade later in the day. The next spring I was surprised to see the rhubarb in the pot was growing faster than the established ones in the ground. This year, after five years they are still growing faster. I was cutting my first rhubarb while other people's was only about 6". I have two plants in the planter. The first winter I covered them with a piece of fleece fabric. Second winter I put a little straw on them. The last couple years I haven't covered them at all. I live in Iowa so they do get covered with snow. The plants are bushy and healthy. I will never plant them in the ground again.
I have four plants in containers and I'm wondering if I can leave them outside during the winter? I am in Illinois and live in an apartment building on the second floor. I have read they can be stored in an unheated room but that would mean moving these four heavy pots across town to my storage unit, something I would rather avoid if possible! Does anyone know anything about this? Any help is appreciated!
Just acquired a flowering rhubarb plant from a garden at a home that my son and daughter-in-law purchased. What is the best way to transplant it into my yard.
Rhubarb is normally transplanted in early spring (before growth begins) or early fall (mid-September through early October). At this point, I guess get it in the ground as soon as you can. Rhubarb does best in fertile, well-drained soils and full sun. Translate into the garden with the buds 1 1/2 to 2 inches below the soil surface. Follow above plant care directions. Good luck!
my rhubarb stalks are very thin. The entire is straggly looking..never gets big like see other peoples. Plants are in the open but seem to not even kill weeds or grass around them. They just aren't producing like they should. I even bought new plants because the old ones were not producing well. Do I need to replant somewhere else..get new plants and start completely over?
You do not say how old your plant is…but you need to give it about two years (tow growing seasons) to become established. Old plants become spindly and thin when they are overcrowded; they would need to be divided and replanted (whereupon the two-year establishment cycle would start again). It’s also possible that your plant lacks vigor due to poor soil: Rhubarb is a heavy feeder: it loves organic matter such as aged manure and/or rich compost. It should get full sun and regular watering. Anything here sound like a fit?