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’
Gardening Products
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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Rhubarb is an early spring crop and the crowns are best planted in early spring when the roots are still dormant or plants are just beginning to leaf out. (In most regions, the peak of harvest is May and June.) However, rhubarb can also be planted in the fall after dormancy has set in--if you want to try then.
Oh, we are envious! You can keep picking rhubarb all summer as long as it has not gone to seed. Just don't harvest it all at once. Leave 1/3 of the stalks on each plant. Leep it watered and well fed with organic compost. If you see the seed shoot (a shoot with many small white balls instead of a leaf), cut it off and keep harvesting. Time for some rhubarb crisp!
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