I wasn't real pleased with the last online succulents order. I don't even blame Mountain Crest Gardens. It's just a reality that there is going to be some carnage when you have the USPS treating the package like a basketball. Although I still have some doubts about the Graptoveria Lovely Rose, I think all 12 of the plants will live and eventually thrive. However, there are enough stores in the Billings area for me to find most of the plants I want, and I can pick them up and look at them before I buy.
I got some cabin fever today so headed north with a list in my head. At the top was Perle von Nurnberg, which may be the most popular Echeveria due to its "pearlescent pink and purple tones" as Mountain Crest says. I also wanted to get a Haworthia and a cactus. My first stop was the Laurel Walmart and I found nothing except a very dry example of an Echeveria Neon Breaker, which has frilled, colorful leaves. Interesting, but I decided to pass. Before heading to the Billings Walmart to see if they had a better selection, first I stopped at Home Depot. That's where I found Perle von Nurnberg, not just a 2-incher but a big 3.5-incher. I was getting ready to put it in the cart, but I saw another plant that I thought looked slightly better. I took that one instead, and also bought a new 6-inch pot for it. Imagine my surprise when I got home and the tag said "Echeveria Red Sky." It's a big, nice-looking plant but I don't get to cross Perle off my list yet.
Mountain Crest gushes, "Echeveria 'Red Sky' is a dazzling succulent hybrid admired for its velvety, rose-toned leaves that glow with soft pink to coral hues under sunlight. Its broad, slightly cupped foliage forms a graceful, symmetrical rosette that resembles a blooming flower, with each leaf blushing deeper along the edges in full sun or cooler temperatures." OK, maybe I accidentally hit the jackpot. After potting, Red Sky went into the garage window and is parked next to Lola. They enjoy both grow lights and a south-facing window. Lola's colors have developed in just a few weeks, and hopefully the same will happen with Red Sky.
I had four other acquisitions today, and all went into my warm office. The Haworthias at Home Depot looked good. I mean, really good, so I got two. The first is Hawortha attentuata Concolor, and the next is Haworthia limifolia Fairy Washboard. I decided to pot them in the coffee cups I drilled. They aren't supposed to get big, but may produce offsets that will fill the 3-inch cups.
Home Depot also had a good selection of cacti, and I chose Mammillaria rhodantha. It adds some color to my cactus collection, which now numbers three, all Mammillaria genus.
And finally, an impulse purchase, Crassula rupestris. It can provide company to my Jade plants (Crassula ovata). This time I promise to follow instructions and not water most of the plants I bought until next week, but this one seemed like it needed a drink so I doused it. I swear, already it has perked up from when this picture was taken just a few minutes ago.
My office window sill is now officially full and I don't contemplate adding to it. There are three Crassula, three Haworthia, three Mammillaria cacti, a Thankgiving cactus, and one lone little Sempervivum that might be dead. Maybe it is just playing possum to stay in the warm office and avoid getting put in the cold greenhouse.
For the garage, I still have the following on my list: Echeveria Perle von Nurnberg (obviously), a variation of Perle called Rainbow (variegated stripes of vibrant pink, blue, and yellow, currently out of stock at Mountain Crest), Echeveria Chroma (very colorful), Echeveria purpusorum Dionysos (red/orange/purple), and maybe something weird like Lapidaria margaretae Karoo Rose (blocky looking, pastel colors, blends in with the quartz in its native Namibia).
I am not searching for more Sempervivums to join the 10 at the greenhouse because I already have five Chick Charms® Sempervivums on order from Garden Crossings as part of my spring petunia order: Appletini, Berry Blues, Cosmic Candy, Gold Crown, and the very popular Gold Nugget. The documentation isn't real clear about the rosette size except Gold Nugget (5 inches), but some of them might be huge. In any case, they all should produce a lot of offsets and can fill up a big pot. They don't arrive until mid-May so I have time to figure out what pots to use. Or what raised bed.
I have plenty of room for the various succulents I have acquired, but I'm wondering what happens if I have any success propagating them. They might take over the greenhouse this summer instead of what I have planned. Who needs tomatoes anyway? And come cold weather, only the Sempervivums can stay in the unheated greenhouse. The rest somehow have to fit into the garage and the house, or I may have to start an aggressive gifting campaign. Now is the time to call dibs on a Red Sky offset.












































