November 24, 2024

VIDEO: Rhubarb: From Planting To Harvest ❤️ 💚


Ravishing rhubarb! Dramatically beautiful, delicious and easy to grow!
A surprisingly versatile plant, rhubarb can be used to make drinks, crumbles, chutneys, sauces… the list goes on.

Its striking good looks with its bold, ruby stems and umbrella-like leaves, will add height and structure to your garden along with a splash of gorgeous colour that will return year in year out.

In this video, you’ll learn everything you need to know to grow and care for your own rhubarb. Autumn is the best time to get it in the ground – you will be reaping the rewards of rhubarb sooner than you thought!

If you love growing your own food, why not take a look at our online Garden Planner which is available from several major websites and seed suppliers:
https://www.GrowVeg.com
https://gardenplanner.almanac.com
https://gardenplanner.motherearthnews
and many more…

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26 thoughts on “VIDEO: Rhubarb: From Planting To Harvest ❤️ 💚

  1. A little late to the party here, but I love your videos. They are always useful, informative, interesting, and enjoyable. Well done!!

  2. I routinely raid my mostly absentee allotment neighbours' three rhubarb beds (with their permission of course) to make wine from – a 1 gal Pinot Grigio kit will make 2 gals of wine, sprinking sugar at 20g per litre for 1%abv for the other gallon over the chopped stems to draw the flavour out before fermenting under airlock.

  3. Thank You for sharing. My husband and I ate rhubarb for the first time last year. Yummy. Bought our first rhubarb plant this year. Hoping to get decades of yummy rhubarb from it.

  4. Thank you Ben! Have a a plant in need of manure!! Wish I had this video when I planted mine! Look forward to the wonderful abundant plant I will view next season!

  5. I had established rhubarb plants in my garden that got over grown by brambles, as I was ill I couldn't do much outside .
    I have now cut it all back so does anyone know if they will grow back, they have been growing there for abou 30 years so are they to old now ?

  6. I remember my grandmothers patch in New York. It was huge. Mom and dad would come home with bags of it. Then we would have pie periodically throughout the year. It’s one of my favorites for making crisps.
    I forgot about this plant until last year when my neighbor gave me some.

  7. I live in Indonesia, we have monsoon for 6 months and summer for another 6 months, can i plant rhubarb in this weather? Harsh summer and Harsh rainy season

  8. Unsure of the Victoria variety since mine were gifted by divisions with a 'Free' sigh, but rhubarb can be acidic. Pouring boiling water over the prepared and cut rhubarb chunks, steeping for a couple of minutes, followed by discarding the water, will permit reducing recipe sugar amounts by about half.

  9. My father kept a patch of rhubarb around the house I grew up in. This plant is the reason I love sweet and tart things. My mother would help us harvest it and turn it into strawberry rhubarb jams and pies. I just recently started my own patch of rhubarb.

  10. You can indeed cover the crown if its coarse enough and it's not a yearly event. once every five years with woody material even sunflower stalks is enough. forcing rhubarb after all is tricking it into thinking its buried. it's all about moisture. it originally came from some wild stock some time in the past and natures not too fussy about covering things with leaves or filling areas with weeds, rhubarbs have enormous leaves that can if left, block all weeds from growing and encroaching. winter weeds are soon killed off from a lack of light. i've never known an established rhubarb be outcompeted by anything other than a tree.

  11. Thank you for this video. I planted some rhubarb seeds last autumn which didn’t do well. I’ve planted more, but it’s been snowing and I forgot to bring the pot in. Hopefully 3rd time lucky if I take your advice. Plant in spring and try the container with a hole for light.
    Just a quick question. Do you have advice for keeping cats away from your garden?

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