Soil

Echeveria “Blue Boy”

E. pallida x E. gigantea

Pink and blue cupped ovate leaves. Hybridized in California. Freely branching, rosettes to 6″.

Echeveria “Blue Sky”

Fast-growing rosettes to 12″ with blue centers and red edges. Thin, rounded leaves, slightly cupped.

Echeveria “Brown Rose”

Korean hybrid from E. melaco

Unusual waxy coffee-colored brownish rose-tinged rosettes. Full sun at the coast, afternoon shade inland. Great for rock gardens.

Echeveria “Crinoline Ruffles”

Evergreen succulent with dramatically ruffled fleshy grey-green rosettes with soft red edging that gets more intense in full sun. Red-orange flowers in late summer. Full sun at coast, afternoon shade preferred inland.

Echeveria “Cubic Frost”

PP27,527

Thickened blue succulent leaves with a mid-leaf fold turn bright pink in full sun. Pink flowers. Great in rock gardens. 10″ rosettes.

Echeveria “Etna”

Large wavy blue and violet leaves with large and varied caruncles. 12″ rosettes. Flowers periodically Spring through Fall, with pink-orange flowers on tall stalks. Great for rock gardens.

Echeveria “Hortencia”

Large colorful hybrid. Rosettes to 12″ across. Deep burgundy-purple leaves in full sun. Wavy leaf edges.

Echeveria “Latte Rose”

E. agavoides x E. lilacina

Unusual waxy coffee-colored brownish rose-tinged rosettes. Full sun at the coast, afternoon shade inland. Great for rock gardens.

Echeveria “Mahogany”

Rosettes 8-12″ on thick succulent stalk with deep burgundy-red leaves and wavy edges. Red flowers in fall.

Echeveria “Neon Breakers”

PP21,406

Thick wavy neon-pink succulent leaves. Slow growing, generally solitary. Great in rock gardens. 8″ rosettes.

Echeveria “Red Ruffles”

E. gibbiflora “Red Ruffles”

Large ruffly rosettes to 16″, bluish inner leaves to reddish outer leaves with bright red tips.

Echeveria “Sahara”

Blue rosettes with stunning ruffled pink edges. Likes to cluster, pink flowers in spring sometimes in early winter.

Echidnopsis cereiformis

Synonym:
Echidnopsis nubica (burgundy petal form)

Family: Apocynaceae (former Asclepiadaceae)

Small, lumpy stapeliad with tiny yellow to burgundy flowers. Forms a dense, clumping, mat overtime.

Habitat:
Small lithophyte that grows in the shade between rocks in Ethiopia, Sudan, and Eritrea

Cultivation:
Should be watered once every 1 to 2 weeks during the summer, keep dry in winter. Grow in an extremely well draining media (mostly pumice), a mix of decomposed granite (DG) and pumice works very well!

A note on nomenclature:
The clone we carry has a yellow center and burgundy petals. According to some texts this form should be referred to as Echidnopsis nubica, whereas others refer to it as a synonym of Echidnopsis cereiformis, which stereotypically has solid yellow flowers.

Echinocactus platyacanthus

Slow growing, but one of the largest barrel cactus at 5ft across and eventually to 7-8ft tall. Stays small, grows slow, in a pot. Frost Tender, keep dry in winter.