Although I am trying to sprout some things in the garage, this is the slow time of the year for greenhouse activities. It seemed like a good time to add to my succulent collection. I had just four before going on a buying binge: Aloe Vera and Cuban Oregano which I have had for 30 years or more, a spiked aloe-like plant acquired from my brother a few years ago, and a Thanksgiving Cactus given by my sister last summer. The succulent expansion started two weeks ago with acquisition of a Jade, then mushroomed quickly with the addition of an Echeveria Elfstone, a Mammillaria Elegans Cactus, a Graptosedum California Sunset, and the lovely and talented Echeveria Lola. These first five came from Walmart. Yesterday I received a six-pack of Sempervivums with no ID tags from Plants for Pets via Amazon. I believe one of them is an Arachnoideum type with webbing over the leaves like a spider's web, and the others will go unidentified for now.
Walmart has an interesting way to display succulents. They unpack the box from Costa Farms or wherever, put the trays on the darkest shelf they can find, and forget about them. Succulents need lots of light and a little bit of water, and they get very little of either at Walmart. I feel like I'm the rescuer of the five plants that I have bought there. The local places I have investigated in Billings, Gainan's and Roots, both have some nice-looking plants but cost a bit more than Walmart. I particularly had my eye on a Haworthia Zebra at Gainan's, but didn't pull the trigger. Among the big box stores, Lowe's and Home Depot's have a few succulents and probably will have a better selection in the spring. These places have a lot of conventional house plants, but green leaves with no promise of flowers doesn't interest me.
Most of the succulents came in tiny 2-inch pots, but the Echeveria Lola came in a slightly larger 3-inch, and I thought it was big enough to put in a 6-inch terra cotta rather than the 4-inch which most of the rest of them received. The Sempervivum Arachnoideum also got a bigger pot. After I potted everything, I happened to Google "succulent pot size" and several so-called experts said a plant in a 2-inch pot should be repotted into a 2.5-inch or 3-inch, and anything bigger will kill the plant AND ALL OTHER LIFE ON EARTH. As explained by one source, "Too much space can actually prevent a succulent from growing much larger, because the roots spread out before the succulent has time to catch up. If you buy a two-inch succulent, a 2.5-inch pot is generally a good choice if you're planting it by itself." Got it, roots are bad. It makes no sense to me, but I'm not an "expert." I'm just going to be careful not to overwater and leave it at that.
We begin our photo tour with Lola and Arachnoideum in their lethal 6-inch pots.
Echeveria Lola will need bright sunlight to develop its rosy colors and keep its compact form. It will develop peach-colored, bell-shaped flowers. Like sempervivums, Lola can reproduce by producing new offsets around the base of the plant.
Sempervivum Arachnoideum has fine web-like hairs covering the leaves. There was a little dead-looking ball floating around in the box that I believe came with this one. I have a sprouting bowl with various leaves and cuttings, so I added the ball to that just in case there is still some life in it. I'm designating this as Sempervivum #1.
Mammillaria Elegans Cactus will develop a ring of flowers. You can see one little spot of purple a bit left of center.
The Jade that started it all. It originally had three stems, but one was rotted. I cut off the stem above the rotted part and am trying to root it and a stray leaf in the aforementioned sprouting bowl.
Echeveria Elfstone has red-tipped leaves, which aren't real apparent right now. It will produce orange flowers in the spring.
Graptosedum California Sunset is a hybrid of Graptopetalum and Sedum. Its pink coloration is most vibrant when under stress (bright sunlight, infrequent watering, cool temperatures). In spring it will have clusters of white, star-shaped blossoms.
Sempervivum #2 has five distinct rosettes. I tried to blow the dirt off after I repotted, but looks like I need to try again. Sempervivums have fine hairs on the leaves that make it difficult to dislodge the dirt. Canned air sends the soil flying without dislodging the dirt on the leaves so I might try a little brush.
Sempervivum #3. Two rosettes, purple-tipped leaves.
Sempervivum #4. Extensive purple in the leaves. Second rosette starting to appear. I didn't notice it when I was taking the portrait, but it is barely visible on the left.
Sempervivum #5. A perfect little rosette but no distinguishing features.
Sempervivum #6. Purple-tipped leaves.
Sempervivums are native to the mountains of Europe and are cold hardy, so should be able to handle Red Lodge Zone 5a. #6 (shown below) went into the plastic-covered mini greenhouse inside the main greenhouse. It has not gotten below zero inside the greenhouse yet this season, and the plastic cover on the mini adds a few more degrees of protection. It was a balmy 57.6 inside when I dropped it off today, and the 10-day forecast doesn't show anything colder than the low 20s. Good luck, little unknown plant, see you in the spring.

Feb. 3 update: With the weather lately, the danger inside the greenhouse is the heat, not the cold. Outside on Jan. 30 it was 45, but the sun boosted the temperature inside the greenhouse to 82, and inside the mini with the cover zipped to 107! #6 seems to have survived this ordeal. I decided to move all six semps (can I call you semps?) to the greenhouse, and they are on the bench, not in the mini. The overhead automatic vents still open as temperatures rise, and I also (1) set the main fan to come on at 75 degrees rather than 80, and (2) hooked up the heater to blow air (not heated) on the plants when it gets above 70. Part of the reason to move them all there is because I need the space in the garage. I'm moving most of the other succulents into the garage for a more seasonal temperature (garage temperature lowered from 55 to 50) and new grow lights which were installed today. I just put in another plant order, this time at Mountain Crest Gardens. Four new semps will go to the greenhouse and eight other types will go into the garage. Hopefully all will get enough light to bring out their best colors.
Moving on to the plant with many names that definitely is not cold hardy. After 25 years or so of calling this Greek Oregano, I identified it recently as Cuban Oregano, but it is neither Cuban nor an oregano. It from eastern Africa and is related to mint. It goes by a number of other names as well (Indian borage, country borage, French thyme, Indian mint, Mexican mint, broad leaf thyme, soup mint, Spanish thyme, Comfort Plant), and even has two Latin names, Plectranthus Amboinicus and Coleus Amboinicus. Whoever is in charge of such things have proclaimed that the latter name is the currently-accepted one. Apparently there is no dispute that the "Amboinicus" portion of the Latin names refers to Ambon Island in Indonesia, but as mentioned, it from Africa not Indonesia.

Anyway.... It has a distinctive aroma and can be used in cooking and in concocting home remedies, although I have tried neither. I just appreciate the smell from time to time. This is my best copy from last summer although it has gotten a bit leggy under the winter light. These are very easy to propogate; just cut a stem and stick it in soil. About 15 years ago, I stuck a cutting in the ground and it developed into a perfect mound about 18 inches across before an autumn frost killed it. Since then I haven't been able to to reproduce that success, but with access to the greenhouse for the entire growing season this year, I'm hoping to have at least four excellent examples in 8-inch pots by September.
Same goes for the Aloe Vera. I have four pots struggling through the winter, but I will repot the sprouts in a few months and come summer they should be thriving in the greenhouse.