• Showing 73–81 of 86 results

Sale
350.00
  • Sedum dasyphyllum ‘Minor’ is a small succulent shrub with opposite, blue-green and purple (more purple in the sun) leaves and creeping stems forming shrubs.
  • The blooms are white and small with little black dots on the petals and green ovaries.
  • Sedum dasyphyllum “Corsican Stonecrop” is a great addition to a xeriscaped garden. As it grows, it spreads out, creating ground cover. It grows well in many areas, including full sun or partial shade.
  • Sedum plant needs more water in the spring and summer, but you can allow the topsoil to become slightly dry between each watering. During the winter season, reduce watering.
  • Plant Will Be Given With free Plastic pot
Sale
295.00
  • Sedum x Rubrotinctum ‘Aurora’ is the most beautiful little succulent. The colors are so dainty and pretty and makes a great addition to any garden or collection.
  • It has pale pink, fleshy jelly bean shaped leaves with small yellow flowers emerging in the winter. Perfect for hangers, rockeries as long as grown in a partly shade position.
  • Six- to eight-inch (15-20 cm.) stems grow upward and lean when leaves weigh it down. Small yellow flowers appear abundantly in winter to spring during the early years of growth.
  • Sedums grow best in well-drained gravelly soil that is not wet in winter.
  • Plant Will Be Given With Free Plastic Pot
Sale
280.00
  • Also known as “string of beads” or “Rosary,”
  • This succulent is a perennial vine of the Asteraceae family and is native to southwest Africa.
  • Like most succulents, it requires very little hands-on care.
  • In addition to its unique foliage, string of pearls can produce tiny white flowers with bright-colored stamens. (Some say the blooms smell like cinnamon.)
  • Plants Will Be Given With Free Plastic Pot
Sale
475.00
  • The base coloration of Stenocactus multicostatus ‘Wave Cactus’ is a rich, greyish green, which serves as a lovely backdrop for the large pink blooms that will emerge during the summer months, featuring yellow stamens and deeper pink striping down the length of each petal.
  • The brain cactus (Stenocactus multicostatus) features distinctive wavy ribbing on its surface that almost looks like the folds of a brain,
  • Stenocactus Multicostatus is native to Mexico, specifically to the Chihuahua, Coahuila and Durango, Zacatecas, and the Nueva Leon regions. The dry meadowlands suit it well, and it adapts well to draughts by hiding in the rocky soil.
  • Its small size and low-growing nature make it suitable to be grown in pots. In suitable environments, it can also be grown outdoors
  • Plant Will be Given With Free Plastic Pot.

 

Sale
370.00
  • Echeveria Shaviana ‘Pink Frills’ is known to be a beautiful succulent that can reach up to 20 cm (8″) tall and around 30 cm (12″) in diameter. Most notable are the leaves that become purple, silver blue to green as it ages. It is known that the plant regularly creates offsets and when it flowers you can expect orange to pink flowers
  • This succulent type needs typical watering as the other succulents.
  • It is a nice addition to your collection of plants
  • Echeveria shaviana is a tender, soft, evergreen succulents native to the mountain areas of Nuevo Leon in northern Mexico.Shaviana belongs to the Echeveria plant genus a member of the Crassula family (Crassulaceae).
  • Plant Will Be Given With Free plastic Pot
Sale
350.00
  • This plant is a cluster of rosette shaped leaves in beautiful shades of emerald green, lime green and rose, like glittering jewels.
  • ‘Campfire’ requires very little care and prefers a location with good sun and good drainage. Blooms with inconspicuous white flowers
  • Crassula Erosula Flame plant are very easy to grow
  • Rare Variety
  • Plant Will Be Given With free Plastic Pot
Sale
350.00
  • Echeveria purpusorum is a small succulent with tight, usually solitary rosettes that occasionally produce few offsets.
  • Echeveria purpusorum is a petite rosette-shaped succulent. They are native to Oaxaca and Puebla, Mexico.
  • The genus Echeverria is named after Atanasio Echeverria Codoy, an 18th-century botanist. However, the purpusorum species was discovered by Carl and George Purpus. Carl, a botanist and George, the explorer usually worked together.
  • Like most succulents, Echeveria Purpusorum is short and thick-leaved plant. It is known in some circles as The Rose or Urbinia. Its moniker, the rose, comes from its leaves’ arrangement and pigmentation. A full-grown plant resembled a rose flower. This resemblance is reinforced by its red pigmentation along its leaves’ edges.
  • Echeveria purpusorum has typical watering needs for a succulent. It’s best to use the “soak and dry” method, and allow the soil to dry out completely between waterings. Be sure not to let water sit on the leaves, and use a well-draining soil.
  • Plant Will be Given With Free Plastic Pot
Sale
350.00
  • Graptoveria superbum · This is a Graptopetalum and Echeveria hybrid
  • The Latin name Graptopetalum means “marked petals”
  • Like most succulents, they need great drainage and infrequent water
  • A very popular succulent for its beautiful purple pink foliage.
  • Graptopetalum pentandrum superbum is a pretty succulent, forming wide, open rosettes of fleshy, lavender-pink leaves held at the end of thick stems.
  • Plant Will Be Given With Free Plastic Pot
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