News:

Picture posting is enabled for all :)

Main Menu

How's your rhubarb

Started by ruffmeister, April 19, 2007, 17:03:58

Previous topic - Next topic

Cuke

I planted my first crown just over a week ago, and like goldendaisy123 says, my leaves seem to have a few holes appeared in them and one has gone very yellow. New ones are comign through though I don't seem to have killed it...

Assuming it needs a bit of a 'feed' what should I use? Very new at all this so if you can be specific about what and where to get it that'd be good... otherwise I tend to just use 'multi purpose compost' which I'm guessing is a bit of a jack of all trades, master of none.

Ta muchly :)
Our little corner of the blogging world http://www.growingourown.co.uk

Cuke

Our little corner of the blogging world http://www.growingourown.co.uk

Trevor_D

It's fairly difficult to kill rhubarb. Have you watered it in well? It's been very dry. I think I'd give it a couple of cans of water and then cover with something like straw or rotted horse manure; whatever you can get, but preferably something bulky, rather than potting compost. Let the leaves show through, but pack the stuff all round it. You can't actually pull any until this time next year.

Columbus

hi all,  :)

Like others here I gave my oldest crown a covering of horse muck a few weeks ago, nothing happened for a while but in the last three weeks its grown stems as big as my wrist. I`m eating crumble every day and giving loads away.

It does have a little slug damage but nothing to worry over.

Its grown from a sad peice barely bigger than my thumb that I discovered when I first got the plot, it had one tiny leaf to identify it as rhubarb.

I`ve also got last years splits of crowns from other plot holders coming along in other places to secure future harvests.

Col
... I am warmed by winter sun and by the light in your eyes.
I am refreshed by the rain and the dew
And by thoughts of you...

ruffmeister

yes we are having another crumble this evening v nice

Come visit. www.lottieblogs.co.uk

Trevor_D

Pulled some of the main crop yesterday to make a batch of Rhubarb & Ginger Jam. Nice job for a rainy day!

dawn34

we have 5 lots of rhubarb it has really started to grow the last week or so have been watering them and the leaves are enormous now and really thick stems, these where left on our plot when we took it over no idea what kind but hubby enjoys it and so do the neighbours and friends me i can't stand the stuff.

sawfish

Quote from: Cuke on April 23, 2007, 14:02:05
I planted my first crown just over a week ago, and like goldendaisy123 says, my leaves seem to have a few holes appeared in them and one has gone very yellow. New ones are comign through though I don't seem to have killed it...

Assuming it needs a bit of a 'feed' what should I use? Very new at all this so if you can be specific about what and where to get it that'd be good... otherwise I tend to just use 'multi purpose compost' which I'm guessing is a bit of a jack of all trades, master of none.

Ta muchly :)

As long as you had some compost at least under the crown. Manure would be better but chicken pellets are brilliant just chucked on top and watered in as they're pretty acidic.

Apparently urine is good chucked on your rhubarb (I know it is).  :P

ruffmeister

hmm urine havent tried that one.
Come visit. www.lottieblogs.co.uk

grawrc

I've just bottled last year's rhubarb wine to make room for the next batch. The rhubarb is glorious and far too much for us but other lottie holders know to help themselves. I can only cope with so much crumble but I make rhubarb and ginger jam which goes down well with the troops! ;) and lasts for ever.  I give the rhubarb a good shovelful of manure in springtime as it starts growing and water occasionally with "comfrey soup" or "nettle soup" during the season.

Robert_Brenchley

I give them some fertiliser from the pee barrel now and then; they thrive on it.

Joe11

What do you guys recon could be up with my little plant, it has purple patches over its one leaf??

Joe

ninnyscrops

Mine's rubbish, keeps flagging on me! Posted this on another thread.
Moved it last November and it seemed OK ish, someone said put a collar of manure around it, then fellow plotholder said "it's planted too deep, crowns need to be above the level of the ground, just lift it, back fill and it'll be better than ever".  Another fellow plotholder said to me today "I watered your rhubarb today cos it looked so sad for itself".   

Looked OK at the weekend then has flagged again on me with lots of little holes in the leaves.  Victoria isn't living up to her name, any help!
If I ever get it all right - then that's the time to quit.

Robert_Brenchley


ninnyscrops

I removed it from it's old position about Feb time, frosted it above ground for a week or so then replanted in it's new position.
If I ever get it all right - then that's the time to quit.

busy_lizzie

My rhubarb is amazing! It has really come on so much. The only trouble is that because of the weather conditions, mainly lack of rain I think,some have started to go to seed. This has never happened so early in the season, and it is usually July or August this happens. Any one else have this problem?  ??? busy_lizzie 
live your days not count your years

Robert_Brenchley

Yes, I pulled a flower off at the weekend. It's going to be a weird season.

goldendaisy123

My rhubarb is exectly the same Ninnyscrops. >:( Lots of little holes and seeming limp. I just don't know whats wrong. I've fed it given it manure lots of water but it's not a well bunny!

sand

We forced our 2 year old Victoria rhubarb crown this year for the first time.  Plonked a load of rotten horse muck around the crown and covered it with an unpturned black dustbin about a month ago.

Today we picked our first stalks, very large and fat ones too, leaving plenty behind and some new shoots showing through.  We're very impressed.

What we need to know is what happens next?  How long can we continue to force it for and what do we do when it slows down?

Stewed rhubarb and fresh cream, mmmmmmmmm.


Curryandchips

I have never forced my rhubarb, on second picking this season, and loads waiting ...
The impossible is just a journey away ...

sand

But forced rhubarb is so gorgeous.  Far superior to the rhubarb grown without a little 'help'.

Just the way it's grown in the Yorkshire triangle.

Not that I don't like it however it's grown, I just want to have my cake and eat it!

Sand :)

Powered by EzPortal