
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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Rhubarb does well on its own, but plants that can grow nearby include strawberries, asparagus, horseradish. Onions and garlic do well, too, and any member of the brassica family, such as cabbage, kale, etc. Peppers are said to do well, too. You might avoid planting legumes nearby, as they may attract tarnished plant bug. Hope this helps!
It's early April , trhubarb is growing vigorously and the weatherman is calling for a freeze tonight. Do I need toi protect my rhubarb. Thanks!
It depends on how bad a freeze. Rhubarb usually can tolerate temperatures in the low 30s, even upper 20s (degrees F), but can suffer damage below that. To be on the safe side, protect your plant overnight. You have to be careful about rhubarb, because if the leaves suffer frost damage, the oxalic acid from the leaves may filter into the stalks, making them toxic as well. Signs of frost damage are blackened, shriveled leaves and limp stalks. If you see this, discard the affected leaves and stalks.
Thanks for all the recipes & comments. This plant can also be eaten raw. It grows back really well in the Sprintime here in Utah. It reminds me of my childhood when my mom always grew it..
I live in texas and during the summer it gets really hot if I plant this in planters would it be ok and because we really don't freeze here in the ground would a planter have a batter chance of freezing. I could bring them in doors during the summer heat and outside during the winter months. What do you think? I have also heard you should not eat it after the 4th of July is this true?
There is one variety that is more heat tolerant. Im in NC and grow it in mostly shady part of the garden because of the heat we've had. Valentine rhubarb is the variety.
We have had a crazy warm winter and it hass been as much as 60 degrees here with not much snow. So here it is the 9th of March and my rhubarb is sprouting up and it is going to get back down to 12 degrees and snow. Can I cover with some wood shavings? Do I need to cover?
Hi, Lori: Good thinking! Yes, protect those young sprouts with wood shavings, plastic, straw, or even old blankets—anything to trap Earth’s heat! Thanks for asking!
I have had my Rhubarb in for a couple of years. I get plenty of stalks but they never turn red. Am i doing something wrong or are they OK to eat. someone told me there a \rhubarb that is green. Please Help.
Kindest Regards, Tom
Tom, rhubarb is available as both red and green varieties; for red, you have to get a true red one (even those so named are not necessarily). The good news is that both—all, apparently some gardeners have experienced a mottled combo of colors—are edible. The green stalks may not be as tangy as the red but they are perfectly fine for eating.