Echeveria lilacina, also known as Ghost Echeveria, is an attractive, slow-growing Echeveria up to 6 inches (15 cm) tall. The stem is up to 1 foot (30 cm) long and up to 1 inch (2.5 cm) in diameter. It looks a bit like Echeveria plush plant from the photo (if the leaves are sort of fuzzy.)
They remain compact and green and tend to multiply spreading up to 8 inches wide. Click here for instructions on how to enable JavaScript in your browser.
Just pin this image to one of your Succulent boards on Pinterest so that you can easily find it later. Echeveria eurychlamys is a succulent glabrous herb with usually a single rosette that grows up to about 9 to 15cm wide.
It has red flowers which have a yellow tip and it blooms in the spring. Jumping Cholla TRUTH : The Cactus that Shoots Needles? Echeveria maxonii is a glabrous, shrubby succulent with green leaves that turn red when stressed and purplish margins. Generally disease free. Trying to grow echeveria outside in the winter, here in NC, is a challenge. Woolly Rose offsets readily and forms nice large clumps. The leaves are covered in silver hairs and sometimes tinged red along the margins. Echeveria subalpina is a lovely species of slender, pointed leaves that tend to stand upright. The mother Echeveria have few flowers that soon to bloom.
In the Spring, yellow and orange blooms appear on long arching flower stems that grow from the center of the rosette, attracting pollinators and hummingbirds to your garden. Echeveria hyaline is a stemless succulent with densely crowded leaves that are whitish-crystalline with thin, hyaline margins and greyish pink tips. It has glabrous, stem-less, succulent rosettes, up to 6-8 cm in diameter and height, and usually stays solitary but sometimes offset to form a dense clump. The leaves are fleshy, oval-shaped, keeled, pale bluish-green, with edges and tips adorned with a hint of pink, red or brown, more conspicuous in winter.
Its leaves are violet and full of farina when young, and reddish green with no farina when older. Native to Mexico from the Crassulaceae family, topsy turvy is a unique silver blue succulent with long narrow inversely keeled leaves. It was made mainly from plants that I grew myself from leaf or stem cuttings.
It’s identification trait is in the distinct white line of the leaf edge. It is a new Echeveria hybrid produced from Echeveria x imbricata, and forms rosettes up to 12 inches (30 cm) in diameter of deep peacock-blue leaves with crinkly margins. Echeveria globulosa is a very beautiful succulent plant with compact rosettes with fleshy, pointed leaves. Echeveria setosa (also known as Mexican Firecracker) is an evergreen succulent with numerous offsets in older plants. Haworthia tessellata is a stemless succulent plant that grows thick plump leaves that grow in a spiral form. Remove any dead leaves from the base of the plant. New plants can be grown from the small leaflets (bracts) on the flower stalk. Is this supposed to happen? If you have your echeveria on a windowsill, turn the plant occasionally to ensure that all sides of your plant get enough sun. amzn_assoc_ad_type = "smart"; They are also one of the most prolific types of succulents and can bloom several times a year under the right growing conditions—displaying stunning orange, yellow, and red flowers.eval(ez_write_tag([[728,90],'succulentalley_com-box-3','ezslot_3',113,'0','0'])); Echeveria types generally have thick green fleshy leaves. The waxy leaves have a powdery soft blue-grey color. It has high level of red color to its leaves in good light. For all order related issues. Here are some plant care tips: Like most succulents, echeveria love full sun outdoors and need a sunny window if you grow them as an indoor plant. Echeveria colorata is a beautiful, large succulent that forms mostly a solitary rosette, up to 16 inches (40 cm) in diameter, with distinctive silvery, upright, arching, fleshy, lance-shaped leaves with a fine point edged in red. This variety produces lots of offsets and, if given space, can develop into a 1.0′ clump of 20+ rosettes.
Echeveria ‘Dark Moon’ is characterized by concentric rosettes comprised of an abundance of deep violet black leaves. Echeveria ‘Starlite’ is a smaller rosette that grows offshoots quickly, forming clusters of rosettes. Best used as a filler for your succulent arrangements and will add a pop of color and texture to your succulent garden. Leaves will blush red with sun and temperature stress, Fertilizer for Cactus: When, How and With What. Wait until the soil has dried out completely before watering your Echeveria, and then give it a good watering, making sure the excess water drains out from the pot. The flowers are orange-red with yellow tip and up to 8 inches (20 cm) long. Echeveria ‘Blue Swan’ produces light blue-green leaves that form perfect rosettes. Even damaged leaves might give you an opportunity for new babies! Echeveria peacockii (Peacock Echeveria) is an evergreen succulent with pretty rosettes, 6 in. The leaves are rolled in an interesting way downwards along the length of them and curled up at the ends. The leaves are rolled in an interesting way downwards along the length of them and curled up at the ends. Vigorous and popular, Echeveria ‘Imbricata’ (also known as Blue Rose Echeveria) is a small evergreen succulent forming tight rosettes of fleshy, saucer-shaped, blue-green leaves. The ‘Topsy Turvy’, Echeveria runyonii is a cute and hardy succulent that has delighted gardeners for many years. Echeveria nuda is a branch forming species which can grow up to 30cm tall in ideal conditions and has attractive yellow flowers. Grow under glass in a standard cactus compost, in full light. I need a recipe for whatever is white and sitting in all the crevices of my sempervivums, and the areas are soft. It spreads easily to form a low growing, compact clump or cluster. Echeveria calycosa is a succulent that is light green in color when young, and turns pinkish as it matures. Some have stems of flowers that can grow to about two feet long. Both its leaves and stem are quite stout. It’s normal for a few leaves to die off over time (and they normally turn brown.) Echeveria ‘Azulita’ is a prolific cultivar with lovely powder blue leaves. The flowers are scarlet to orange, yellow-margined and produced on up to 70 cm long stalks. Soil that is constantly damp or doesn’t drain well will result in Echeveria root rot. It features lovely light-blue/green leaves on a tight rosette and offsets very regularly. goldianaEcheveria harmsiiEcheveria harmsii ‘Ruby Slippers’Echeveria heterosepalaEcheveria humilisEcheveria hyalinaEcheveria ‘Irish Mint’Echeveria imbricataEcheveria juarezensisEcheveria kimnachiiEcheveria lauiEcheveria leucotrichaEcheveria lilacinaEcheveria ‘Lime n Chile’Echeveria ‘Lola’Echeveria longissimaEcheveria lyonsiiEcheveria luteaEcheveria maxoniiEcheveria macdougalliiEcheveria multicolorEcheveria ‘Neon Breakers’Echeveria nodulosaEcheveria nudaEcheveria oreophilaEcheveria pallidaEcheveria paniculata v. maculataEcheveria patrioticaEcheveria pendulifloraEcheveria peacockiiEcheveria ‘Perle von Nurnberg’Echeveria pilosaEcheveria pinetorumEcheveria prolificaEcheveria pruninaEcheveria pulidonisEcheveria pulvinataEcheveria purpusorumEcheveria quitensisEcheveria racemosaEcheveria RaindropsEcheveria reglensisEcheveria ‘Ramillette’Echeveria roseaEcheveria rubromarginataEcheveria ‘Rundelli’Echeveria runyoniiEcheveria runyonii ‘Topsy Turvy’Echeveria ‘Sanyatwe’Echeveria secundaEcheveria sayulensisEcheveria semivestitaEcheveria sessilifloraEcheveria setosaEcheveria setosa var ciliataEcheveria shavianaEcheveria spectabilisEcheveria skinneriEcheveria StarliteEcheveria strictifloraEcheveria subalpinaEcheveria subcorymbosaEcheveria subrigidaEcheveria subsessilisEcheveria tenchoEcheveria TippyEcheveria tolimanensisEcheveria tobarensisEcheveria tolucensisEcheveria trianthinaEcheveria uhliiEcheveria unguiculataEcheveria utcubambensisEcheveria ‘Violet Queen’Echeveria walpoleanaEcheveria xichuensisEcheveria ‘Yamatoren’. It is one that can propagate from leaves, though it can be quite particular.
Echeveria ‘Galaxy Blue’ produces a stunning icy blue rosette with large, wavy leaves. Native to South Africa from the Crassulaceae family, key lime pie is a green succulent with triangular shaped leaves with scalloped or crinkled wide tips that grow on short stems with brown fine aerial roots. It is very symmetrical and pretty whether or not it is in flower. Use a 1/2 strength succulent fertilizer in spring. Echeveria kimnachii forms a single rosette up to 4.5 cm in diameter and up to 5 cm in height. It blooms small orange-red flowers that ends on a 25 cm long flower stalk. This plant is actually a member of the crassula family but the rosettes are very similar to echeveria. Hello.
LOL. Echeveria prunina is a succulent with stems about 10 cm high and rosettes up to 14 – 15 cm wide. In late summer or fall, it sends up 8 in. It’s really a big help…, My pleasure Beth. Zone 9b is about as cold as they will stand in the winter. This variety has pale green, plump leaves with very pointed red tips. Echeveria topsy turvy. Moving it to a sunny window is a good idea.
One characteristic that seems prevalent in all of the echeverias is that the leaves are somewhat chubby, since they store water in them.
Echeveria ‘Irish Mint’ is the resulting offspring of Echeveria derenbergii and Echeveria runyonii ‘Topsy Turvy.’ The plant can be identified by its bright mint green leaves that have a distinct tubular shape and grow in an upswept pattern. Echeveria ‘Baron Bold’ is an attractive fairly large succulent with big, bumpy leaves that are red and green in color and have interesting jagged edges. Echeveria plants hate having wet feet. In high light levels they produce these vibrantly bright orange leaves with striking lime green centres. It can get bright pink points at its leaf tips when kept in bright sun. Echeveria ‘Blue Surprise’ got its name due to its fleshy blue leaves. The flowers are orange-red with yellow tips and appear on up to 12 inches (30 cm) long stalks. I’m afraid there won’t be enough room for the bigger plant. A mature Echeveria plant will produce offsets from its main stem, which can be separated and propagated as a separate plant.