
Flowers have a youthful beauty, but agaves and other succulents are like living sculpture. I find them fascinating and irresistibly touchable, despite those fierce thorns. This is ‘Whale’s Tongue’ agave (A. ovatifolia), a giant, blue-green rose of a plant.

Its serrated leaves are defended by thorns that glow deep-red in afternoon light.

Ghostly imprints of the thorns remain long after a tightly furled new leaf has opened up. You can see imprints on the previous image as well. They add to the majestic beauty of this agave.

For Dr. Seussian interest, spineless prickly pear (Opuntia ficus-indica) can’t be beat. Its leaves are oblong, green paddles.

Accidentally knock a paddle to the ground and it will root where it lies, growing into a new plant. Fascinating, no?

‘Bloodspot’ mangave is a beautiful, freckled hybrid of an agave and a manfreda. Mine likes bright shade and well-drained soil in a container, and it stayed outside all last winter, though covered by a sheet during our hard freezes.

Mother of Thousands (Kalanchoe daigremontiana) is not winter-hardy in Austin, which could be a blessing, as it can be invasive in zone 9 and higher (Florida, parts of California, Australia, etc.). The little plantlets growing along the edge of the leaves will drop off and root, giving you hundreds of new plants or a yard full of weeds, depending on your growing zone and feelings about it.

Mine is a passalong from Diana of Sharing Nature’s Garden, and I think it’s an interesting plant to experiment with. I’m hoping it will bloom for me, but maybe it needs a warmer (i.e., frost-free) climate for that. At any rate, its form and texture, like so many succulents, is fantastical.
Grow a few succulents and you can’t help but have fun.
All material © 2006-2010 by Pam Penick for Digging. Unauthorized reproduction prohibited.