
Pay in installments of $5.66 with
,
and
Shipping Estimate
USA
- USA
- CAN
- USA
- CAN
Ships within 48 hours · Estimated delivery Jul 2 - Jul 7
For Your Every Summer RSVP, with Code: SUMMER15
Description
begonia rex indoor plant Begonia rex 'Escargot' – Foliage FactoryBegonia rex 'Escargot' Begonia rex 'Escargot' is a spiral leaved Rex Begonia with foliage that curls inward at the base like a snail shell. Silver and green bands follow the twist of each asymmetric leaf, making the spiral visible as the crown develops. A shallow rhizome builds a rounded mound above the pot. New leaves open with a tight curl, then broaden into layered foliage with a clear coiled centre. Escargot spiral leaf form Rhizomatous Rex
Begonia rex 'Escargot'
Begonia rex 'Escargot' is a spiral-leaved Rex Begonia with foliage that curls inward at the base like a snail shell. Silver and green bands follow the twist of each asymmetric leaf, making the spiral visible as the crown develops.
A shallow rhizome builds a rounded mound above the pot. New leaves open with a tight curl, then broaden into layered foliage with a clear coiled centre.
Escargot spiral leaf form
- Rhizomatous Rex Begonia with a compact mounding crown
- Coiled leaf bases forming a snail-shell spiral
- Silver and green banding across asymmetric foliage
- Textured leaves held on fleshy petioles above the rhizome
- Shallow-rooted habit suited to wide, low pots
Compact rhizome growth indoors
'Escargot' belongs to the Rex Cultorum Begonia group, a cultivated line derived from rhizomatous Begonia ancestry. The rhizome creeps along the substrate surface and produces leaves from growing points along its length.
The spiral leaf base is the cultivar’s defining structure. Indoors, the crown develops most evenly when the pot is turned regularly, the substrate remains airy, and the curled leaf bases stay dry enough to reduce fungal pressure.
Care for the spiral rex crown
- Light: Place in bright filtered light. Strong, softened light reduces stretched petioles around the spiral crown. Shield the foliage from direct midday sun.
- Watering: Water once the top 2 cm of mix feel lightly dry. Apply water to the substrate and keep droplets out of the curled leaf centres.
- Substrate: Use an airy, moisture-retentive mix with fine bark, perlite, pumice, and a light organic base. Dense compost around the rhizome raises rot risk.
- Pot shape: Choose a shallow, wide pot with drainage. The rhizome spreads sideways across the surface.
- Humidity: Maintain 50–70% humidity with gentle air movement. Plant cabinets and enclosed shelves suit this cultivar when condensation stays off the leaves.
- Temperature: Keep at 18–26°C. Move the plant away from cold window glass during winter nights.
- Feeding: Provide diluted complete fertiliser during active leaf production, then reduce it once new leaves appear less often.
- Rotation: Turn the pot every week or two when light comes mainly from one side. This maintains an even rosette.
- Repotting: Repot when the rhizome reaches the pot edge or the substrate has compacted. Keep the rhizome visible at the surface.
- Propagation: Use leaf sections or rhizome divisions in warm, humid conditions. Each rhizome division needs an active growing point.
Leaf-base and crown checks
- Brown spiral edges: Check humidity, heat, watering rhythm, and fertiliser strength. The curled leaf base reacts quickly to dry air.
- Soft rhizome sections: Check drainage and temperature. Cool, saturated substrate around the rhizome needs correction immediately.
- Leaf spotting: Water sitting in the leaf coil can leave marks. Water the mix directly and increase airflow.
- White dusty patches: Powdery mildew can appear when foliage stays damp in still air. Remove affected leaves and improve circulation.
- Uneven crown growth: Rotate the pot and check whether one side receives much stronger light.
Small pinkish flowers may appear under steady growing conditions. Removing spent flowers and old leaves keeps the rhizome surface clear.
Safe handling around rhizome pieces
Keep Begonia rex 'Escargot' beyond pets and children, especially when fallen leaves or rhizome pieces are present. Its rhizome and underground parts contain soluble calcium oxalates, and eaten tissue can cause oral irritation, drooling, vomiting or digestive discomfort in pets.
Escargot name and leaf coil
Begonia commemorates Michel Bégon, while rex means “king” in Latin. The cultivar name 'Escargot' is French for “snail”, matching the coiled leaf base and shell-like spiral that gives this rex Begonia its signature shape.
Begonia rex 'Escargot' develops coiled silver-green leaves from a shallow rhizome, with each blade curling into a snail-shell pattern.
Shipping Notes
- Free Standard Shipping on $100+ Orders to the USA.
- Except Preorder products are shipped in 48 hours.
- Delivery to the USA:
- Standard Shipping : 3-10 business days
- If time is of the essence, please consider selecting expedited delivery for faster service.
Exchange/Return Notes
- We offer a 30-day return/exchange service after receiving.
- Final sale items are not eligible for returns or exchanges.
- To process your return/exchange, please contact us at [email protected]
- Please click here for more details>>> Return & Exchange Policy