Hi folks! Very early this spring (I think) or over the winter, I planted some bare-root rhubarb crowns from Homebase into a fairly deep and wide hole - clearing the couch grass, brambles etc., and incorporating compost - so that the crowns were just showing, in an open site. I started them off in a pot as ground wasn't ready, but they did have one or two leaves on them. Over the summer the leaves died down but have been replaced periodically by one or two extremely small leaves, which have also then died back. The soil also seems very dry, but I have watered now and again. I think it is too dry for them. It hardly seems to rain on my plot - in SE London, and I'm now wondering what to do. I have read contradictory things about how deep the crowns should be planted. Shall I cover them with some more soil and see how they grow come the Spring - or try some more in a different place? I also planted about three crowns much too close together. The crowns haven't rotted and the roots seem to be well anchored into the ground.
Advice welcome. (I thought you could hardly kill rhubarb and it grew like a weed. Obviously not. Does it do better in a slightly shaded site?)
Advice welcome. (I thought you could hardly kill rhubarb and it grew like a weed. Obviously not. Does it do better in a slightly shaded site?)
If you think of the size and rate of growth of rhubarb it's no surprise that it's quite a heavy feeder (the old jokes about manure on your rhubarb and "oh I prefer custard on mine" are there for a reason) so I suspect basically you need to improve the soil so it has more nutrients and better water holding... plenty of composted manure (NOT fresh at this stage though fresh manure can serve another purpose once the rhubarb is established) gently eased around the patch/crowns and next Spring ensuring it's damp but not wet will hopefully do the trick. Best not to force or use the crop next year (sorry!
It's radius squared rather than diameter squared so 2 x 2 x pi ie 12.5 square foot - still quite a large area but not as bad as first thought
Julie
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