WORK TIMEMon – Fri: 7:00 AM to 8:00 PM | Sunday: 7:00 AM to 5:00 PM
WORK TIMEMon – Fri: 7:00 AM to 8:00 PM | Sunday: 7:00 AM to 5:00 PM
This succulent type needs typical watering as the other succulents. The watering method is very important to keep your Acanthocalycium healthy.
Aeonium castello-paivae variegata ‘Suncup’: Beautiful rosettes variegated green and creamy white. One of the smaller species of Aeonium but produces multiple offsets.
Yellow Bunny Ears is a cute succulent perfect for beginner gardeners. Its green pads covered with yellow polka dots resemble the ears of bunny and makes the plant appear more beautiful.
One look at the red/red-gray spines of Ferocactus latispinus should have any cactus fan hooked.
Campfire Plant grows as an evergreen and is a flowering succulent. Being an evergreen plant, it will keep its leaves throughout the year.Campfire Plant is known for its clump-forming habit and growing to a height up to 30 centimeter.
Doris Taylor is an attractive pale green succulent plant. The leaf tips of this echeveria are sometimes dark and leaves are always quite fuzzy. It has a charming rosette shape
Echeveria apus is an fast growing evergreen succulent with rosettes of obovate, green/grey leaves with dainty pretty pink edges. Yellow flowers opening from late winter to summer.
Resembling a sunset in plant form, Echeveria ‘Chroma’ forms rosettes of multi-hued leaves, featuring colors ranging from dark purple to bronze to peach to green! This particular Echeveria has a much shrubbier growth habit than most succulents of this type
Echeveria Elegans, also known as the Mexican Snowballs or Mexican Roses, are great succulents for beginners to grow. These easy-to-care-for succulent plants store water in their thick, uniquely shaped leaves, making them remarkably easygoing, drought-tolerant plants.
One of the first Echeveria’s acquired for collection many years ago. Beautiful purple often distorted leaves with a whitish margin.
One look at the red/red-gray spines of Ferocactus latispinus should have any cactus fan hooked.
Echinocactus grusonii, popularly known as the golden barrel cactus, golden ball or mother-in-law’s cushion, is a well known species of cactus, and is endemic to east-central Mexico
Barrel cactus is a beautiful cylinder shape plant. It boasts heavy spines and blooms bright yellow, orange flowers.
This fast-growing succulent is a hybrid of Echeveria colorata and Graptopetalum amethystinum. It has blue-green leaves, and when grown in the sun, the edges blush pink. Watch for yellow flowers in the Spring
The Houseleek succulent makes highly decorative small to medium sized succulent with rosettes of triangular leaves, some are densely covered by silvery-white hairs, other have grey-green leaves or will turn bright red in full sun.
“Haworthia Zebra Plant” is one of our favorite plants. Their really easy to grow. They don’t require much in the way of care… or window space. Their the perfect low maintenance plant for the busy person.
“Haworthia Zebra Plant” is one of our favorite plants. Their really easy to grow. They don’t require much in the way of care… or window space. Their the perfect low maintenance plant for the busy person.
Sweetheart hoya plant, also known as Valentine plant or sweetheart wax plant, is a type of Hoya appropriately named for its thick, succulent, heart-shaped leaves. Like other Hoya varieties, the sweetheart hoya plant is a stunning, low-maintenance indoor plant.
Lace aloe has red/orange/pink blooms in the spring and summer and can bloom multiple times in a row. Cut the stem when the blooms are done to allow more energy to go to growing bigger. They can also produce pups.
Ladyfinger Cactus (Mammillaria elongata) (de Candolle): Tall, cylindrical cactus with a dense covering of short spines that can be white, yellow, or copper in color.
Echeveria elegans is a succulent evergreen perennial growing to 5–10 cm (2–4 in) tall by 50 cm (20 in) wide, with tight rosettes of pale green-blue fleshy leaves, bearing 25 cm (10 in) long slender pink stalks of pink flowers with yellow tips in winter and spring
It is called the money plant simply because it has round, plump, flat leaves that might, with a bit of imagination, look like a coin.