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Planting, Growing, and Harvesting Rhubarb
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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Some are big and have flower stalks others are very small just starting to get leaves others are bare roots with no stalks (oops while digging?). Will any of these survive if I plant them now? She wanted the patch that came with her new house cleared out. If they're better planted in the fall, how do I get them to go dormant and save them over the summer? We're in zone 5b (NW CT).
I have several rhubarb plants. Last spring, 2018, we burned some dead grass, & the fire spread over the dead rhubarb plants. The rhubarb did not grow in 2018 at all. I am wondering if the plants will grow for this season. Last season was also a very dry summer, which may have affected the growth. I have never had this problem, & usually rhubarb grows if the season is dry or not!
If the fire was left to burn over the crowns of the rhubarb, it may have killed the below-ground parts of the plants, too. Rhubarb tends to not be planted too deep in the ground, too. If you don’t see any signs of life at this point, it may be a lost cause, unfortunately!
I just found a plant in my garage it鈥檚 in a plastic bag from when I got it how long will it last before I plant it as I鈥檓 moving to Spain soon and want to try to grow it there???
I'm near London, UK. I missed the boat with my newly-purchased small Victoria rhubarb roots with no leaves. I now know they should have been planted in early spring! Is it OK to plant them now in mid-April?
My rhubarb never got ripe. It stayed green and had little flavor and was not tart. My soil is very sandy and dose not hold nutrients well, could this be the issue? The plants look good just no taste. What do I need to do?
Thomas: color depends on the 'type' of plant. Victoria Red is more red stalks and a l little less tart than the green. As far as cooking the rhubarb is concerned: it doesn't matter. From what I read- I don't think the sand is a good idea, as all rhubarb needs the feed/nutrients. Maybe you could add some darker soil--miracle grow organic--to your soil?
I want to plant and grow rhubarb but notice that it should not get warmer than 75F (right?) but I live in a location where the summer gets in 90s-low100s. Is there a variety that can tolerate this? Or should I pot them and keep inside during summer? The winters here can get cold (below freezing) - could the pots be kept outside then or am I looking at a inside plant situation year round?
For those that are concerned about your weather areas and rhubarb: I grew up eating wild rhubarb in North Dakota, so I think the information would be for using the knowledge learned here and apply to your area. Hotter Zones -maybe plant rhubarb in a 'partial shade' area; colder zones: fuller sun areas? I have both areas..patches scattered on the property: now living in the East: Zone 4. We rarely get to 100 degrees, lots of rain, mountainous area, humid. We also rarely get below 0 degrees. My most productive patch is at the end of my full sun garden but it gets shade from the huge lilac trees in the evenings. Overall-I feel 'best sun' is 'morning sun'. Hope this helps.
My family has grown Rhubarb in Illinois for many years. We have many weeks of below freezing temps in the Winter and 90-100 degree Summers.
I have never had any issues with it not coming back every Spring