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I have a small rhubarb plant and one of the stems has gotten some rust on it. What should I do? (there are only 3 small stems on the plant)

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Lorem Ipsum
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Dale
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2 Answers2

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Q. Is there a reason your rhubarb is standing in water?

Rhubarb prefers even moisture during the growing season (but does require well-drained soil), it most definitely does not like standing in water...

If it has been standing in water for a while, I would hazard a guess you're seeing a form of fungi (disease) brought on by crown rot.

Rhubarb isn't supposed to grow in the hot weather here in South Carolina. The soil is hard clay which takes forever to absorb water. Therefore I built a 2 inch high wall around it, which I fill with water everyday. The water takes about 5-10 minutes to be absorbed, which is why I can't just water it normally. Even with these measures it is sooooo hot here that if I miss a single day the plant wilts. Perhaps I should get some better soil.

Unless you create a better growing environment for your rhubarb I believe you will be forever fighting a losing battle...

Q. Can you grow them an area that gets some shade, preferably somewhere that gets morning & early afternoon full sun, then shade for the remainder of the day?

Or set something up to provide that kind of environment eg

Also rhubarb prefers soil with good organic content, which by its very definition means the soil will have good drainage...

Even in your climate rhubarb should only need approximately 2inches (50mm) of water a week, assuming you take care of the other requirements...

If you really want to grow rhubarb I think you might be best building yourself a raised bed:

  • You get to control the exact soil make-up, a major plus from what you've described about your native soil.
Mike Perry
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  • Rhubarb isn't supposed to grow in the hot weather here in South Carolina. The soil is hard clay which takes forever to absorb water. Therefore I built a 2 inch high wall around it, which I fill with water everyday. The water takes about 5-10 minutes to be absorbed, which is why I can't just water it normally. Even with these measures it is sooooo hot here that if I miss a single day the plant wilts. Perhaps I should get some better soil. – Dale Sep 19 '11 at 22:36
  • The rhubarb is already in a location where it gets full sun until noon and then full shade. – Dale Sep 20 '11 at 03:13
  • @Joe If the rhubarb is only getting sun until noon (12:00pm) then it's not getting enough sun, especially if **full shade** is provided from noon onwards. Amending the soil so it's suitable for rhubarb growing is the other piece of the missing puzzle (IMHO). Raised bed will offer you the best solution for that (again IMHO). – Mike Perry Sep 20 '11 at 03:21
  • @Joe As stated in your other rhubarb question, [How do I grow rhubarb in hot weather](http://gardening.stackexchange.com/q/1551/394) & as you've stated above, your area of the country really is suited to rhubarb growing. I honestly hope you're successful, as rhubarb is a great "fruit" to grow & eat, but I honestly think you are going to struggle no matter what (though I would love to be proved wrong on that). – Mike Perry Sep 20 '11 at 03:29
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Do you have just spots, or do some of those spots have holes?

If there are holes, then according to "The Organic Gardener's Handbook of Natural Pest and Disease Control", another possibility is rhubarb curculios: yellowish gray, powder covered, 1/2-3/4 inch snout beetles. They eat into the stalks to lay eggs.

To control:

  • Handpick adults.
  • Eliminate dock plants from weedy areas; curculios feed on it.

If there are no holes, then Mike Perry's diagnosis of fungus is probably correct -- you need to correct the culture.

bstpierre
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