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Home > Begonian > Volume 68 (November/December 2001, page 236)
B. U402: An
Unidentified Begonia From Venezuela via Japan
by Freda Holley
This interesting begonia entered in the Shrub
Division, 2001 Miami Begonia Show and photographed by Joyce Pridgen
is an interesting new shrub-like species that is great for the holiday
season. Thelma O'Reilly designates it B. U402.
It evidently arrived here via a gift from a Japanese
visitor to John Howell of San Antonio who, as is his wont,
propagated and distributed it widely, identified simply as a 'Venezuela
Species'. I bought one in Ft. Worth in the spring of 2000 and thinking it
fragile grew it carefully in a contained environment, but only when I gave
up on this and put it outside to fend for itself in Nacogdoches, TX did it
come into its own, growing rapidly and as the weather cooled beginning to
bloom profusely.
But to be on the safe side, I took a cutting to root
and also put down the leaves I stripped off this cutting. To my surprise,
even the half-leaf took and produced 7 or 8 little plants! In fact,
from that one small cutting and its leaves, I wound up with about 25
plants! Hybridizers, take note, if there is a gene for easy reproduction,
this one has it!
It blooms all winter and makes a lovely drooping
basket for the holidays. I am now growing it here in Stillwater, OK and
find that it can also take the heat (to 108 degrees!) well if given deep
shade and ample humidity. I was able to self it last year too and the
identical seedlings give evidence that it is indeed a species. They grew
fast and well. B. U402 is probably related to B. ulmifolia
as one cannot tell the seedlings of these two apart until they are fairly
far along. Then, as its leaves tike on their bronze color, B. U402
becomes quite different in appearance. The flowers and flowering habits
also differ.
Try it; you'll like it. -FH

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