Wednesday, March 5, 2014

Indigenous Beauties Aloe vanbalenii

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Who needs flowers when youve got this Aloe in your garden?


Aloe vanbalenii

I started these Indigenous Beauties posts as a way of highlighting indigenous plants that are not very commonly used in the garden, but really should be. This plant doesnt quite fit into that category, because Ive noticed that people are paying more attention to this particular Aloe...and for good reason.

Aloes are especially useful in a garden, because they mostly flower in winter when everything else is looking dry and spent. Add to this, the fact that during hot, dry periods, the foliage of many aloes will start to turn red, and youll begin to see their unique place in a garden.

Aloe vanbalenii especially, needs very little attention, and forms dense clumps of competing plants. In times of plentiful water, or in a little shade, their foliage is a pleasing apple green, but as the heat increases, they turn a deep orange-red colour. They remind me of a bunch (what is the collective-noun?) of Octopuses jostling for their place in the sun.



Their foliage looks great in combination with yellows and other warm colours. Here theyve been planted with equally hardy silvery Kleinia fulgens to fill the gaps. The silver really emphasises their colour.

They are stemless, so they dont get tall, but each plant will spread to about 1m wide and about 50cm high. Their flowers are yellow, and occasionally pink.

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