Sharing a note about Rex Begonias here in my garden diary. I bought a few different cultivars of them and really LOVE them. Unfortunately, they all failed. For different reasons. But, they all failed. I want to try them again next year, but have learned a few lessons.
First, a little bit of learning about Rex Begonias. I put them in containers on our front porch and back patio. They're on this list from Garden Design of good shade plants for containers. And, I think they are "good". They are knock-outs looks-wise. But, they're not easy to care for (imho).
First, let's talk about the back patio failure. I had these lovely pink/peach begonias in the white container on the stairs.
Earlier this year, we had a hard cycle of first drought, then an extended period (around the 4th of July) of rain. It turns out, this container had a plug in the bottom of it. It *has* a whole, but we were using it as a sort-of display container last year with a nursery container inside if for our front porch fern. In that case, the PLUG made perfect sense. But, when I moved this out back this year, I planted this lovely, large Rex Begonia in it and never bothered to check the plug. Welp, I drowned this Rex Begonia. It rotted out right at the soil level. I noticed that this container wasn't draining, so I stuck a stick underneath it, hoping it would let some of the water out. Days went on. No change. So, I lifted it up and discovered the plastic plug. D'oh.
From Fine Gardening, they talk about watering here.
Soggy conditions, indeed.
Let's call this: I drowned it.
I also planted a couple of other Rex Begonias in our front porch container that you see below. What you don't see in the photo are either of the medium-sized begonias that I tucked in here. Why? I'm not sure. Maybe they were crowded out? Maybe I drowned them, too?
These are - four weeks later - nowhere to be seen in the planter.
Knowing what I now now (and understanding that these things appear to want to be a little more DRY than a little more wet), I'm thinking that planting them as a monoculture might be the right way to go for us. A couple of large, Rex Begonias in a container by themselves where I can control the water and not let them get too soggy and rot-out.
I've posted about monocultures before here and seems like something I want to continue to learn about and experiment with in our containers.
Before I go, I'm thinking that this is the first of a new series that I'd like to track over time here on the blog: Gardening Lessons Learned. I have a bunch of posts from the past that I know I can add that [Gardening Lessons Learned] tag to, but I'll start to track them over time going forward.
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