Every time I do an unboxing of an online plant order, I say, "Never again." Today was no exception. I received the box from The Next Gardener, three days later than the USPS estimate. The box looked fine on the outside but inside was the usual scene of chaos. I would rate three of the six plants as an initial disappointment. This includes the primary reason for the order, Echeveria Rainbow, the variegated variant of Perle von Nurnberg. It and the others probably will be fine in the long term so I'm not going to complain the company.
But I doubt I will ever order from them again. Rainbow cost $22.10, and for that price I think it should be more ready for prime time. It is a large plant and was not damaged in shipping, but I had to strip about 15 leaves off of it and potted it up as best I could. Here it is with its cousin Perle that I got about a month ago. It's a bit lopsided after the cleanup but maybe it will grow out of it.
In the background of the above image is the Crassula cv. Buddha's Temple which also did not make a good initial impression. It escaped from its pot inside the box, and it has such a small, dry root system that it was top heavy and toppled over when I tried to put it back in. I'm not going to water the others for a few days, but I will water this one today to try to get it anchored.
Here are all six plants after the unboxing. At lower left is the Pachyphytum Apricot Beauty, which lost all of its leaves on one side during the transit. One good thing about having your succulents delivered by the US Postal Service is you always have lots of loose leaves that you can try to propagate.
In the front center is the Echeveria Linda Jean which arrived in good condition, and next is the top-heavy Crassula that refused to sit in its pot. In the back row, the Echeveria Purpusorums flank the Rainbow. The Purpusorums also were in good condition. I ordered two of them because I have fat fingers and didn't notice until later. I potted up one of them and stuck the other one into the Bonsai Bowl with the three unknowns.
After four experiences, I have to rate ordering succulents online as miserable. But I'm in the middle of Montana and it is the only practical way for me to get certain varieties, such as Rainbow. I placed orders with four different companies, and I'll rate Ramsey's first and the other three tied for last (Mountain Crest, Plants for Pets, and The Next Gardener). Ramseys is the least expensive, their quality is at least as good the others, and there were no disasters like the Apricot Beauty I got today or the Lovely Rose I got from Mountain Crest five weeks ago. Lovely Rose is still hanging in there, thanks for asking.
I'm not even saying it is the fault of the companies that it is not a good experience. Shipping plants is a difficult thing to do, and having the US Postal Service as your carrier only complicates the process. (Plants for Pets used UPS.) I have two more plant orders that I am expecting. In April, Burpees is sending me strawberries. I'm not worried about the 25 bare roots, but I'm also getting one live plant. And in May, Garden Crossings in Michigan is sending me 12 varieties of Supers (Supertunias, Superbenas, Superbells) and five varieties of Sempervivum Chick Charms.
I would like to patronize local stores, but (as I said) some varieties are only available online. Highlights of my wish list are:
- Corpuscularia lehmannii Ice Plant
- Echeveria Elegans Mexican Snowball
- Echeveria pulvinata Frosty
- Echeveria runyonii Topsy Turvy
- Gollum Jade (probably available locally)
- Graptovia Fred Ives
- Greenovia aurea variegata
- Kalanchoe humilis Desert Surprise
- Lapidaria margaretae Karoo Rose
- Sempervivum Virgil Ford
Also today, I potted up (6") two of the Monarda (Bee Balm) that I raised from seed. One more is still in a 4" pot. In addition to being a woody shrub it has herbal uses, and I want to put one of them in a barrel outside the greenhouse along with other herbs. The other one or two Monarda I might plant in my yard. Supposedly they are hardy.
The pepper plants are ready to pot up from seed starters to 4", that is assuming they recover from the infestation of aphids that I tried to smother with soap today. Others that might be ready to get 4" pots are the latest thyme attempt and some green onion sprouts. As I move up to larger pots, space inside the garage becomes more difficult to find. The monarda above took the place of two rosemary plants. They are under grow lights with a sliver of sunlight from the south window. The two rosemary along with two mint plants "volunteered" to move to the greenhouse to test their hardiness. I'm not planning on turning on the heat for two more weeks. The temperature isn't supposed to get much below freezing the next week or so, and I piled straw around them. If they don't survive, I've got plenty more where they came from.











































