February care

Bergenia 'Winterglut' in February: monthly care

Month-by-month careBergenia 'Winterglut'

In February your bergenia 'Winterglut' needs attention: watch the bloom.

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  • Blooms
Bergenia 'Winterglut' (Bergenia 'Winterglut')
Foto: Rasbak / Wikimedia Commons / CC BY-SA 3.0

What to do this February

Blooms

Once established, Bergenia 'Winterglut' is remarkably undemanding. Water moderately during the growing season, ensuring the soil doesn't dry out completely during prolonged dry spells in spring and summer. The thick rhizomes store some moisture, so the plant tolerates short droughts well, but consistent moisture encourages lush foliage and better flowering. In autumn and winter, natural rainfall is usually sufficient. Feed in March or April as new growth begins. Scatter a general-purpose granular fertiliser such as blood, fish and bone or a balanced slow-release feed around the base of the plant and lightly fork it into the soil surface. Avoid high-nitrogen feeds, which promote soft leafy growth at the expense of flowers and good winter colour. One application per year is enough; bergenia is not a heavy feeder. This cultivar is fully hardy to zone 3, so overwintering in temperate Europe presents no problems. The evergreen leaves provide year-round interest, turning striking shades of red and purple in cold weather—one of the plant's key attractions. No protection is needed. Refresh the mulch layer in late autumn to suppress weeds and protect the shallow rhizomes from hard frosts, though this is more about tidiness than necessity. Bergenia is generally pest- and disease-free. Occasionally, vine weevil larvae may nibble the rhizomes if the plant is in a container or very dry soil; look for notched leaf edges and wilting. Leaf spot fungi can appear in very wet, humid conditions, causing brown blotches on older leaves—simply remove affected foliage. Slugs rarely bother the tough, leathery leaves.

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