
Planting, Growing, and Harvesting Rhubarb
The Almanac Garden Planner - Use It Free for 7 Days!
Plan your 2025 garden with our award-winning Garden Planner.
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.
ADVERTISEMENT
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?
Hi I live in southwest Wyoming at 6300 ft - high desert. I’m getting ready to plant some rhubarb but understand it needs full sun. I have a 9x24 plot on the east side of our house that gets morning sun until about 1 or 2 in the afternoon (a total of about 6 or 7 hrs of sun) then after that it’s shaded. How well do you think it would perform there?
Hard to tell, but try it. Most sources advise, as we do above, that rhubarb needs “full sun.” That usually means around 8 hours of sun, including midday/afternoon sun. If there is any way you can give the plant a southern exposure—even as a single plant outside of your plot—you may be able to increase its sunshine. If critters are a concern, know that they seldom go after (eat) it, and it will remain pretty self-contained for 4, 5, or even 6 years (before dividing is needed). Just prep the soil with rich organic matter. Hope it succeeds for you!
I will be moving from NY to FL and would like to bring my rhubarb plants and understand they won't survive the winter because it doesn't get cold enough. Would the plants survive if I put them in a spare refrigerator in the winter or refrigerate or freeze the roots?
Rhubarb does not really do well in Florida. Gardeners trying to grow it in the deep south are advised to treat it like an annual. Buy new crowns, freeze them for 6 weeks, and then plant. You could try your way for the first year and see how your plants do. Be sure to give them a little bit of water while you are cooling them.
Hi, I’ve been told that you must cut off the flower stalk to keep the rhubarb growing and I’ve been told it doesn’t matter. Is it necessary to cut off the flower stalk?
It’s better to cut the flower stalk in order to prevent the plant from wasting energy on developing flowers and seeds over more stems and foliage.
Hello, My rhubarb plant flower stalks became rather large before I got the chance to cut them. Since they were so big there were many leaf stalks coming off the main flower stalk. Are the stalks from the flower stalk edible? They look just like the regular rhubarb stalks, and I don't like to waste anything, so I was hoping they are also edible and use them like I would regular rhubarb stalks. Thank you.
Hi there. I couldn’t confirm that it is absolutely safe, so I think it would be best not to harvest those leaf petioles that come off of the flowering stalk itself. Some sources say that the flowering stalk itself is not edible. The flower buds can be eaten when specially prepared, but not the stalk they are attached to, nor the papery covering surrounding the buds, or the leaves along the stem. All in all, it’s best to just discard the entire flowering stalk to be on the safe side. Or, you can place them in a flower arrangement, away from children and pets.