When to Plant Rhubarb in Sydney — Warm Temperate Guide
Photo: Wikimedia Commons
Rhubarb is a cold-climate perennial grown for its tart, colourful stalks used in pies, crumbles, jams, and sauces. It requires winter chill to break dormancy and performs poorly to dismally in tropical and subtropical Australia. CRITICAL SAFETY WARNING: Rhubarb leaves contain high concentrations of oxalic acid and anthraquinone glycosides and are TOXIC. Only the stalks are edible. Never eat the leaves.
Current Growing Conditions
Soil temperature: 19.3°C (optimal range: 10–25°C) ✓ Ready to plant
How to Grow Rhubarb in Warm Temperate Australia
When to Plant
Plant crowns June-August. Adequate winter chill in most years. This is the northern edge of reliable rhubarb production.
- Soil
- Deep, rich, well-drained soil loaded with compost and aged manure. Rhubarb is an extremely heavy feeder. Dig in generous amounts of organic matter before planting.
- pH Range
- 5.5-6.8
- Sunlight
- Full sun in cool climates. Afternoon shade essential in warm-temperate and marginal zones. 4-6 hours minimum.
- Spacing
- 90cm apart, 120cm between rows
- Watering
- Deep watering weekly during active growth (spring-autumn). Reduce to minimal in winter dormancy. Consistent moisture prevents stringy stalks. Drought stress causes thin, tough stalks.
Companion plants: Strawberry, Garlic, Onion, Beans, Brassicas
Avoid planting near: Dock (related weed, harbours pests), Rampant ground covers that compete
Warm Temperate Growing Tips for Rhubarb
Recommended Varieties
- Ever Red
- Wandin Red
- Sydney Crimson
- Victoria
Key Challenges
- Hot summers stress plants
- Variable winter chill year to year
- Crown rot risk in wet summers
Pro Tips
- Choose a cool, partly shaded position if summers are hot
- Heavy mulch and consistent watering through summer
- Sydney Crimson was specifically developed for warmer Sydney-region conditions
Harvesting Rhubarb
When ready: Stalks 25-40cm long, firm, and well-coloured (red, green, or pink depending on variety). Leaves fully unfurled. Stalks should snap cleanly when pulled.
How to harvest: PULL, do not cut. Grip stalk firmly at base and twist-pull outward with a slight twisting motion. Cutting leaves stubs that can rot and introduce disease to the crown. Remove leaf blade immediately (TOXIC - compost the leaves or discard, they are safe in compost). Never harvest more than one-third of stalks at once.
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