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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!
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!)
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, 08:17 AM.
Reason: bad spelling yet again
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...
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.
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?
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
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1574 gin and tonics please Monica, large ones.
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.
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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