Tag Archives: agave

Succulents and Sawtooth Agave: FOTD June 26, 2022

 

for Cee’s FOTD

Century Plant Abloom: FOTD Oct 17, 2021

Click on photos to enlarge.

 

My Century Plant is an Agave Americana. It blooms every 10 to 20 years and then dies, but sends off offshoots which grow into new plants. In this case, it created two, each of which is now blooming at the same time. I think this plant  and its offshoots have bloomed more than twice in the 20 years I’ve been here but I may be wrong. I do remember it blooming at least once before. The blooms are about 8 inches in diameter and the honeybees and wasps love them!

For Cee’s Flower of the Day prompt

Agave and Jade Plant, Jan 23, 2021

For Cee’s FOTD

Jungle Greenery: FOTD, Aug 24, 2020

 

For Cee’s FOTD

Agave: Flower of the Day, Oct 12, 2018

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I promised over a month ago to show you the blooms on my agave spike when they burst out.  Here is the next stage, after the initial thrust that looked like a 10 foot high stalk of asparagus.

See Cee’s stunning offering for the day HERE.

Agave Prebloom Addendum: Flower of the Day, Aug 24, 2018

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.

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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.

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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:

 

 

For Cee’s Flower of the Day.

Agave Pre-Bloom: Flower of the Day, July 29, 2018

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Agave: Flower of the Day, May 8, 2018

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I snapped this agave just in time. The next day I came out and Pasiano had machete’d it to the ground and sent all these little potential plants to the organic dump!  Obviously, many of the flowers were completely past their prime, but some at the bottom were just getting ready to pop.  A new plant will undoubtedly spring up from one of the hundreds that fell onto the ground both before and as he was cutting it down.  It’s happened every year for 17 years now. Like its relative the century plant, it dies back after sending up that colossal shaft that is covered with first flowers and then mini plants. Unlike the century plant that flowers and dies once every ten to twenty years, this one flowers and dies back once a year.

For Cee’s Flower of the Day prompt.