Position

Sun exposure:
Partial shade
Aspect:
East facing, south facing, west facing
Position in border:
Front, middle

Soil

Prefers rich soil:
Clay / Heavy / Moist / Well Drained / Light / Sandy

While technically a vegetable, rhubarb is considered by many to be a fruit, owing to its sweet flavour and use in desserts. For first-time vegetable growers, rhubarb is the perfect choice. Perennial, it flourishes without too much attention, bearing delicious stalks to stew and eat with porridge at breakfast, or to use as an ingredient in crumbles and tarts. Rhubarb is ready to harvest in early spring, when little else is available, making it one of the most prized crops in the vegetable garden.

Rheum x hybridum 'Timperley Early' is one of the earliest varieties to mature, producing pink-red stems streaked with green. It's ideal for forcing to provide tender pink stems as early as February. If left to grow naturally, 'Temperley Early' is ready to harvest from March.

Plant rhubarb crowns from autumn to spring in a sunny spot in well drained soil. Prepare the soil well by digging in plenty of well rotted manure and remove all weeds. When planting crowns, ensure the top of the crown sits 3cm below soil level, and space them at 75cm intervals. Keep plants well-watered in their first year and mulch annually with home-made compost or well-rotted manure.

Plant calendar

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Rheum ‘Timperley early’ and wildlife

Rheum ‘Timperley early’ has no particular known value to wildlife in the UK.

Is Rheum ‘Timperley early’ poisonous?

Rheum ‘Timperley early’ can be toxic. Its foliage is toxic.

Toxic to:
Is known to attract Cats
Cats
Is known to attract Dogs
Dogs
Is known to attract Horses
Horses
Is known to attract People
People
No reported toxicity to:
Is not known to attract Birds
Birds
Is not known to attract Livestock
Livestock
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