BEGONIA CHATTER PRUNING CANES TO GROW AND FOR SHOW. Astro Branch American Begonia Society 4513 Randwick Drive Houston, Texas (713)

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BEGONIA CHATTER Astro Branch American Begonia Society 4513 Randwick Drive Houston, Texas 77092-8343 (713) 686-8539 APRIL 2013 ISSUE PRUNING CANES TO GROW AND FOR SHOW The April 7, 2013 meeting of the Astro Branch of the American Begonia Society will be held at the Houston Garden Center, 1500 Hermann Drive (Hermann Park). The doors will open at 1:00 P.M. This meeting will be held in the Main Hall. President Susan Daugherty will preside over this meeting. Our refreshment Hostess for this meeting will be: Leigh Heard Boyer, Marilyn Chapman and Anna Belle Hicks. Our Vice-President Program Chair Janet Carpenter has a program on Pruning your Canes to Grow and for Show planned for us this month. Tom Keepin and Cheryl Lenert will take us through pruning our cane-like and shrub-like begonias to shape them and make them look pretty to grow in our garden settings or to take to Austin and enter in the Show. We cannot do any severe pruning this time of year, especially if you are wishing to show your plant. We will also go over removing any unsightly growth and damaged leaves to make your plant picture perfect. Next Meeting: DATE: April 7, 2013 TIME: 2:00 PM PLACE: Houston Garden Center PROGRAM: Pruning Canes www.begoniahouston.org If you have not started already, it is time to start feeding your plants on a regular schedule to encourage lots of new growth and an abundance of blooms. You can pot up or down at this time as active growth has begun. If you are going to show your plant, turning your plant ¼ turn each week will make the growth even on all sides. This and lots more information will be coming your way. This will be an interesting program so bring in any plants you wish shape up (Cane-like or Shrub-like) for show or your own enjoyment. Also if the seeds you planted in March are showing a second set of leaves, please bring them along and we will show you how to transplant them. Be sure to display your parking permit for our Officer David to see so you can park with no problems. We look forward to seeing all of you at the meeting. We always have fun and lots of wonderful treats to enjoy prepared by our Hostess See You There!

April May PRUNING, PLANTING AND TRANSPLANTING 3rd & 4 th Capricorn 7 th & 8 th Pisces 12 th & 13 th Taurus 17 th & 18 th Cancer 26 th & 27 th Scorpio 30 th Capricorn 1 st Capricorn 4 th, 5 th & 6 th Pisces 9 th & 10 th Taurus 14 th & 15 th Cancer 23 rd & 24 th Scorpio 27 th & 28 th Capricorn Planting and Transplanting are best done in Cancer, Scorpio and Pisces. Best Pruning for quick growth is first Taurus and then Capricorn. WEATHER FORECAST FOR APRIL 2013 (Taken from the Harris Farmer s Almanac 2013) According to the United States Weather Service, Houston and surrounding area falls in Region 7 of the National Weather Map. Here is what they predict our weather will be like for the month of April 2013 Our temperatures will be slightly below normal and we will have slightly above normal precipitation. Our temperatures should average from 57 degrees in the North to 65 degrees in the South. Our coolest April temperatures will be April 1 st, 5 th thru the 9 th, 15 th thru the 20 th and 25 th thru the 29 th. Our warmest April days will be the 3 rd & 4 th, 12 th thru the 14 th and the 23 rd & 24 th. We could experience showers and thunderstorms, a few being severe, about April 4 th thru the 7 th, 14 th thru the 17 th and 24 th thru the 27 th. There will be isolated thunderstorms at other times. It is suggested that we closely monitor our local weather reports this month. WELCOME NEW MEMBER Please welcome our new member to the Astro Branch. Please be sure to add her to your Membership Roster. Kathleen Murphy 13410 Balcrest Houston, TX 77070 Telephone: 281-890-3323 E-mail: kathleenmurphy4959@sbcglobal.net Welcome to the Astro Branch of the American Begonia Society. We are very pleased to have you as a member and a friend. NOTICE: Members please see Tom at the meeting and make sure all your information is correct. New Rosters will be printed very soon.

HAPPY BIRTHDAY TO YOU! Happy Birthday wishes go out to all our members who were born in this month of April. Tom Anderson Irene Bragg Darrin Duling Edna LaFour Allen Manes Lucy Melara Gary Moffatt Jeff Stagg Faye Stansberry Dianna Wilkerson April 28 th April 5 th April 29 th April 1 st April 3 rd April 2 nd April 25 th April 25 th April 23 rd April 18 th May your birthday be one that is filled with delight, with pleasant surprises from morning to night and may all the joys that this day brings to you happens over and over each day all year through HAPPY BIRTHDAY! THERE S A NEW SEMPERFLOREN IN TOWN Ball Seed Company has introduced a new semperfloren for our gardening pleasure. This new semperfloren is called The Whopper series. Sporting green or bronze leaves and red or pink flowers it s a large plant growing up to 34 inches tall with a spread of about 22 inches. This begonia is a great new addition for the landscape growing in either sun or shade. The Whopper can easily compete with Begonia Dragon Wings for toughness. These monster plants garner attention everywhere they re planted, thanks to their big bold color and ability to stand tough through blazing heat. Semperflorens sure have come a long way from the border plants we used to know. We are testing The Whopper in some of the gardens we take care of. Will let you know how they hold up to a Houston summer. by Joseph E. Laferriere On the Edibility Of Begonias In recent years there has been a surge of interest in the idea of edible flowers. Nasturtiums, daisies, chrysanthemums, dandelions, violets, daylilies, roses and hibiscus flowers all can be eaten, and many of them are rather tasty. However, ornamentals such as foxglove, iris, yews, lilies-of-the-valley, and several others are potentially toxic and should not be eaten. One should never consume any plant material without being absolutely certain of its identity and of its edibility. What about begonias? Begonias tend to be rather succulent, and might seem to make a rather tempting snack. But are they safe? The answer is yes and no. Begonias are safe to eat in small quantities but potentially dangerous in large amounts. The sap of most begonias is decidedly sour to the taste. Begonias have been used as potherbs in Japan, India, Indonesia, and Myanmar (Burma), and in salads in China, Indonesia and Brazil. I have seen children in rural Mexico chew on the stems of wild begonias specifically for the sour taste, which they find refreshing. This is very similar to consumption of lemonade by American children. Begonias are high in fructose, so they may taste somewhat sweet as well as sour. The sour taste of begonia sap is due largely to the presence of oxalic acid. This acid is present in many leafy vegetables, including spinach and rhubarb. In small quantities this acid is harmless, but in larger quantities it can be dangerous. Oxalic acid acts by binding to calcium and other minerals to form insoluble salts which cannot be absorbed by the body. This is not usually much of a problem if the amount of the calcium in the diet greatly exceeds the amount of oxalate, but if the oxalate consumption is very large the acid itself may be absorbed into the blood stream where it can do serious damage. The roots and tubers of certain species have been used medicinally in several countries since they contain cucurbitacins. These compounds

are strong purgatives and potentially toxic; hence below-ground parts of begonias should not be eaten. Commercially grown begonias should also be avoided, since they may have been treated with pesticides. So, if you hunger for a delightfully sour snack, chew on a begonia. But don t overdo it, and have a glass of milk as well, to make sure that you are getting plenty of calcium. (This article was taken from the Begonian September/October 1990 Issue page 175.) (Joseph E. Laferriere is a graduate student in the Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Arizona. His doctoral dissertation project is an ethnobotanical study of the Mountain Pima Indians of northern Mexico.) Meet B. Lubbergei By Mary Ellen Taback This is a pitch for a begonia that is seldom seen or mentioned in the literature. Yet it is a beauty, easy to grow, and easy to reproduce. A cane, its flowers although large are not produced in the overwhelming masses of the more popular canes. This is a modest beauty; it does not shout, See me! B. Lubbegrei is a cross of B. lubbersii x B. dregei. Its leaves show an interesting blend of the two species. They have a heavier texture than dregei, hence are not so subject to mildew. The margins are cut by concave scallops. The upper surfaces are a rather unusual olive-green, with darker veins and red dot at the sinus. The undersides are red. My largest leaves are about 4 long; but most are smaller. The plant is low-growing, and almost independently shapes itself into a neat small upright bush. The blooms are large and fairly numerous, and are two shades of delicate pink, becoming white if bleached by sun or age. Not usually finicky about it environment, B. Lubbergei will sunburn in hot summer sun. It enjoys being under shade of trees, where direct sunlight touches it but not scorch it. Winter, a sunny spot near a window or in the greenhouse keeps it blooming for a long time. It will lose lower leaves, like all the begonias, if allowed to dry out to severely, but will recover them when care is resumed. Someday I would like to find it in a show, so that more growers would come to know and enjoy this lovely Japanese hybrid (by Uemura, 1977) (From the Begonian Volume 57, November-December 1990. Pages 221-222.)

Astro Branch s March 2013 Meeting

More pictures from the Astro s March 2013 monthly meeting putting down seeds.

More pictures from the Astro s March 2013 monthly meeting

Landscaping with begonias! B. Bonfire