Remember on July 29th when I posted this photo of the Aloe prebloom and some of you asked me to show it when it bloomed? I erred in calling it an aloe. It is actually an agave.

This is how it looked as it started to branch out: (click on first photo to enlarge all.)
On August 24, it is now as tall as this little palm and branching out even more. Each of those knobs will be a bloom. When it finishes blooming, the plant will die.

You wonder how it could grow this quickly? Here is the rest of my garden a few weeks ago. During the rainy season, everything flourishes. The problem is keeping it cut back:


Wow…I’m impressed!
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Mother nature deserves the credit!!!
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Also known as century plant — and it’s the base for tequila (fermented agave juice). Your garden is really lush right now!
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No.. not a century plant as it blooms much faster and not the blue agave that tequila is made out of. Sorry…a good guess, though.
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Oh, well — same family!
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Yes.. and I made the same mistake re/ the century plant until I researched it!!! And before I moved to Mexico, didn’t know one agave from another.. You are perfectly justified.
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But, you are right about the garden. Love the rainy season. And it didn’t rain on my house concert party!
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Wow
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Cool! – but yours is just a baby. 😉 Ours had leaves over 7 foot long and the spike grew to over 25 feet in less than a month! ❤
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Wow. Do you know what variety of agave it was? I have one that grows much larger than this and always leaves babies to grow in its place, but certainly the leaves aren’t that long. It seems to take more years to send up a spike as well.
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I believe it was an Agave Americana Marginata – variegated leaves. It had vicious spines, many more than an inch in length – nasty but not without a certain beauty! 🙂
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Let’s face it, I live in the wrong country. Switzerland just isn’t a good thing, all we can boast is edelweiss and that only grows in places where you could almost get buried by an avalance or fall off a moutain side. I saw a few of the agave growing in Portugal, great plants, but a bit kamikaze.
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Good description. I saw lots of geraniums in window boxes in Switzerland.
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Unusual and beautiful!
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