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  • Rhubarb from seed

    Has anyone tried this?

    I quite fancy giving it a go, I've just spotted some Glaskin's Perpetual Rhubarb seeds for 50p.

  • #2
    It takes years to establish, save at least two and get a chunk off a crown, I'm sure someone would send you some on here.

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    • #3
      I know you can sow and harvest same year . Which I still need to try. Crowns don't work for everyone . I shall try and find info .
      Northern England.

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      • #4
        Originally posted by donksey View Post
        It takes years to establish, save at least two and get a chunk off a crown, I'm sure someone would send you some on here.
        Thank you, I really want to try it from seed though. I've already got a couple of crowns on my plot (Autumn fruiting) so I will get a crop anyway. Just fancied trying something diffferent. Plus, rhubarb crowns are so expensive if you buy them from a garden centre. Worth a punt for 50p I reckon!

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        • #5
          Originally posted by Containergardener View Post
          I know you can sow and harvest same year . Which I still need to try. Crowns don't work for everyone . I shall try and find info .
          I'm struggling to find much info online to be honest, I think certain varieties you can plant from seed and treat like an annual. I believe Glaskin's Perennial forms a crown from the first year though (fingers crossed!)

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          • #6
            I thought about trying it but when I went to my local garden centre I found two little Victoria crowns for £1.99 each and they looked really sad and lonely. So I bought them instead and have named the Larry and George. Yeah I know what a Saddo.
            I tried asparagus last year from seed and they were doing very well until next doors dog visited us. So even though you might read its hard to get a result try it you never know.
            Last edited by noviceveggrower; 04-06-2016, 07:17 AM. Reason: bad spelling yet again
            sigpic

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            • #7
              Originally posted by MissC View Post
              Has anyone tried this?

              I quite fancy giving it a go, I've just spotted some Glaskin's Perpetual Rhubarb seeds for 50p.
              That's how I grew mine - it takes a couple of years before it is big enough to pick. It has to build up the root to overwinter successfully.

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              • #8
                That's very interesting Thelma. Did you grow it in pots initially then put it in the ground? I'm wondering if it might be better in a pot so I can move it into the greenhouse over winter then plant in the ground next spring...

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                • #9
                  Did it successfully with Victoria a few year back. Was ready to crop after 2 years IIRC. The BBC mention that rhubarb from see aren't guaranteed to be 'true to type'
                  BBC - Gardening - Gardening Guides - Techniques - Growing rhubarb
                  sigpic
                  1574 gin and tonics please Monica, large ones.

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                  • #10
                    Started them in a seed tray, and then moved them to small pots.
                    Eventually potted on half a dozen of the strongest growing ones, and stood them under the hedge, a fairly sheltered place over winter.

                    Planted them out when they started to grow again in spring, and left them to it......started picking the next year.

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                    • #11
                      Originally posted by Baldy View Post
                      Did it successfully with Victoria a few year back. Was ready to crop after 2 years IIRC. The BBC mention that rhubarb from see aren't guaranteed to be 'true to type'
                      BBC - Gardening - Gardening Guides - Techniques - Growing rhubarb
                      Thanks for the link, I've seen this mentioned a few times but I still don't really understand. Does does this only apply to saved seed? Surely bought seed has to be true to type?

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                      • #12
                        I'm guessing - and it is just a guess - that they are comparing the seed with the 100% knowledge that a divided rhubarb crown is going to give you genetically identical plants.
                        Furthermore, I venture that the seed suppliers would plant their different 'parent' rhubarb varieties at 'safe' distance apart - notwithstanding that, it would only take a particularly anarchistic-aly minded insect to cross pollinate by moving from one parent-area to another... You might even end up with an improved rhubarb plant if it did happen
                        sigpic
                        1574 gin and tonics please Monica, large ones.

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                        • #13
                          I grew Glaskins from seed last year. All germinated well and I put them into the ground around late June. I gave away most but kept one. This year it's already a big plant so I've taken a few stems - this is with moving it again around March this year. If you give them a bit of tlc in year 1 they respond really well I found.
                          Last edited by sparrow100; 04-06-2016, 05:54 PM.
                          http://mudandgluts.com - growing fruit and veg in suburbia

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                          • #14
                            Excellent sparrow that's exactly what I wanted to hear! Fingers crossed for my very own rhubarb patch. Did you plant them in anything particular? I was going to sow them in MPC, then pot them on with 50:50 MPC and well rotted manure as they are heavy feeders. May put a few in the ground at the end of the summer, just as a little experiment, then keep some in pots in the greenhouse.... Not that I'm counting my seedlings before they've germinated

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                            • #15
                              Where do you buy all these varieties of rhubarb? I once tried it with locally unnamed seed; the seeds germinated but I lost them after transplanting.

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