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How to Grow Rhubarb

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General

An essential addition to the perennial vegetable bed, rhubarb will produce year after year, and it's easy to grow from seed. Just be patient for the first year and ahalf after sowing, as plants need to become established prior to harvest.

 

Latin

Rheum rhabarbarum
Family: Polygonaceae

 

Difficulty

Easy

 

Season & Zone

Season:  Cool season
Exposure: Full sun
Zone: Hardy in zones 2 - 9

 

Timing

Sow indoors in April and transplant or direct sow in mid-May where plants are to grow permanently. Optimal soil temperature: 16-25°C (60-75°F). Seeds should sprout in 5-10 days.

 

Starting

Sow 2cm (1") deep, but plan for large plants. One plant will satisfy the needs of one household. Farm rows 100-120cm (36-48") apart, plants 120 (48") apart in the row.

 

Growing

Ideal pH: 6.0-6.8. Any well-drained moderately fertile garden soil will do. Mulch around plants in fall with finished compost or well rotted steer manure. Choose a sunny spot. Rhubarb is cold hardy and drought tolerant. After growth stops in the fall, the plants go dormant, and require a period below 4°C (40°F) to stimulate good spring bud growth. In the second year, remove flower stalks as they appear. Divide plants every 4-5 years. A well maintained plant should produce for over a decade.

 

Harvest

Do not harvest during the first year of growth. Cut the tart red stalks from February to April after the first year of undisturbed growth. Do not eat the leaves. Stalks can be harvested all at once or selectively as required.

 

Seed Info

In optimal conditions, at least 50% of seeds will germinate. Usual seed life: 3 years.

 

Diseases & Pests

Pests: Watch for slugs around new seedlings. Otherwise, rhubarb is a tough, hardy plant with few pests.

 

Rhubarb
Victoria Organic

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