
Planting, Growing, and Harvesting Rhubarb
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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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Since there is no way of knowing how old the rhubarb is, it is your best bet to treat it as if it is its first year.
Hi can you tell me how to thin out my rhubarb and can it be done now?I live in yarker ont
Dividing can be done in early spring or fall, but many gardeners prefer doing it in spring. You should dig up the entire crown and remove side shoots while preserving the roots as best you can.
Hi can you tell me how to thin out my rhubarb and can it be done now?I live in yarker ont
Help please. I have replanted rhubarb in 4 places, the last I dug out my clay soil and replaced with topsoil and some compost from a woodpile area from years past. My rhubarb will be absolutely beautiful THEN holes (bugs eating the leaves) and rust colored leaves and stems. Then plant failure. Help please. I dearly love rhubarb and want to keep a large patch. My plants have come from my Mom's patch which have flourished for years untouched, to reputable garden centers.
My favorite is to make sauce with extra water. Strain the fibrous rhubarb and use as topping on cereal, oatmeal, and ice cream. Now the best part. Use the sweet tart liquid as a mixer with Cruzan Blackstrap molasses rum. ( not spiced rum, sweet dark and smoky)
50/50 is about right.
My son sent me a picture of his rhubarb and it has a big section of flowers coming through the middle. In all my years (67), I've never seen a flowering rhubarb. Is it normal? Should he do anything about it? The leaves are about 16 inches across. It really has me stumped.
I recently read that those flowers should simply be cut out, down to the base, so that the energy gets redirected to producing stalks to harvest.
What your son has is an ornamental rhubarb, grown for its large leafy display. They almost look tropical in size. Lucky him!
I'm in zone 5, and lost mine after a particularly hard winter.
I've promised a plant to my friend for a couple of years and didn't know to divide it when dormant. I've missed it again this spring. Is there any chance I could divide it now anyway? I don't want to keep her waitin g AGAIN!!