Also posted at SentientMeat.Net
Aloe haworthioides (Baker, Central Madagascar) has been blooming for over a week. It's diminutive at just 3 inches across.Aloe haworthioides startled me with the delicious sweetness of its fragrance. You have to sniff very close, but then it smells gorgeous.
To Aloe barberae's dragon, Aloe haworthioides is a dragonfly .
Speaking of hybridizing, Aloe haworthioides is often used in aloe breeding. Its beauty and promiscuity are also drawbacks: many plants billed and sold as Aloe haworthioides are actually careless crosses from uncontrolled pollination. Sounds sexy... but be careful out there!
In the wild, it makes its home in the central mountains of Madagascar at an altitude of 1200-1800 m above sea level. Although a slow grower, it forms offsets and can reportedly be propagated by cuttings, i.e. removing these offsets.
Aloe haworthioides is stemless, perennial and herbaceous.
Here are some more technical details, cribbed from Peter Lapshin's site. (Someone—Saturn, Santa, or Satan—needs to bring me the new comprehensive book on the genus, Aloes: The Definitive Guide.)
Each plant body has up to 100 leaves, 3–4 cm long, approximately 6 mm wide, gray-green with white buds, arranged in a dense rosette diameter of 4-5 cm, leaf margins with harmless white hairs or spines. Flower stems 20-30 cm tall, flowers fragrant, white or pale pink, 6-8 mm in length.
See Also
Aloe haworthioides at Peter Lapshin's siteAloe haworthioides at Dave's Garden PlantFiles
No comments:
Post a Comment
Thanks for commenting at MadProfessah.com! Your input will (probably) appear on the blog after being reviewed.