|
Click Here
for more articles
|
|
|
|
Succulent Spoon Jade CRASSULA PORTULACEA: Drought Tolerant Plants for Dry Gardens or Blooming Houseplants
|
|
Succulents
are great choices for dry gardens. These plants are easy to grow in hot
dry areas and also make great houseplants. Their care is similar to
cactus (without the thorns). One of my favorite succulents is named
Crassula Portulacea, commonly called Horseshoe or Spoon Jade. Recently
they've been called Gollum Fingers or Hobbit Plant because their dark
green leaves look like fingers with reddish tips. These plants can take
full sun to light shade. They are happy indoors or outdoors.
Water wise succulent plants like heat and sun whether you grow them
indoors or in the yard. They are just as easy to care for as their
cousin, crassula ovata. Both plants can take up to 6 hours of sun a
day. If they develop yellow or brown spots on the leaves, it is either
stress or sunburn. If they are in a pot, try moving it to an area with
less sun. If they're outdoors, try giving them a nice soak and they
should perk up. Grown in pots they will remain small and are often used
for bonsai. They will grow slowly and can be trimmed into the shape of
trees. In the ground they will eventually reach a height of 4 to 5 feet
tall. Older plants take on an otherworldly, gnarled look. Visit my
website www.theGardenPages.com to see photos.
I love succulents because they are easy to grow and care free. They are
great if you don't have time to fuss over a plant. Crassula happily
oblige and even produce blooms in later winter. This increases their
value as a landscape plant in my book as winter blooming plants are
uncommon. They produce flower clusters that look like tiny bouquets of
daisies. Bloom color can range from light to dark pink, some have a
salmon or coral tint. The plant I started as a small cutting two years
ago is blooming for the first time this year. Established plants should
bloom reliably each year.
They are called succulent plants because they store their water in
their trunks and leaves. This allows them to get by with little water.
All that stored water can make them susceptible to rot if they sit in a
pool of wet dirt. Let the soil dry out between watering to keep them
happy. Crassula are best grown in USDA Zones 9b – 11. Every year,
mine are able to take a light frost for a few hours. But I'd give them
overhead protection in winter if you are in a cold area.
Xeriscaping with drought tolerant cactus and succulents has become
popular out here in the southwest where we sometimes have water
rationing and shortages. I’ve got a little corner of the garden
which I’d like to look like an underwater grotto. That's a tall
order here in Los Angeles we don’t get a lot of rain, so
I’m planting it with succulents. I think Neptune would be proud.
These succulents add a dramatic touch and look like some sort of sea
plant or coral to me. Crassula are and easy and reliable addition to
any water wise garden.
|
|