solana succulents

Indulge me, if you would, a quick return to last month’s San Diego County Fair. There, in the flower show going on in the botan­i­cal build­ing, I ran across this one class they had for “most unusual foliage.” Flow­ers are great, but so are leaves. This lit­tle dis­play included a few pretty spe­cial examples.

Here you see var­ie­gated milk this­tle and a fuzzy kalan­choe leaf, thick and rigid like many lay­ers of felt.

This was the win­ning leaf, from a suc­cu­lent echevaria. Not the pret­ti­est thing on earth, but it def­i­nitely fit the “most unusual” category.

While at the fair I ran across the dis­play I ran across the dis­play mounted by Solana Suc­cu­lents. The place has been around for a while, but I’d never taken the short trip to north county to check it out. This past week­end I took John up for a quick visit.

Head­ing north, once you clear the thin atmos­phere of Del Mar, you come upon a chain of fun, funky lit­tle beach towns on the way up the coast. A visit to Solana Beach and neigh­bor­ing Encini­tas will give you some com­fort that the 1960s never went away very far, though they did get a lit­tle rein­ter­preted and gentrified.

Solana Suc­cu­lents occu­pies the out­door spaces of a lit­tle house that’s been con­verted into a shop. I liked its tight, funky feel. You’ll find lit­tle suc­cu­lent gifts, big­ger land­scape spec­i­mens, as well as some wild curiosi­ties that’ll prob­a­bly keep a con­nois­seur happy. With so many pointy, sharp plants around, this is no place to take your tod­dler. But for two peo­ple who find suc­cu­lents totally cool it was a great way to spend part of an afternoon.

Here’s a brief gallery of some of the hun­dreds of neat plants there. I tried to get the names, but a few plants weren’t labeled. And beyond that there were some unknowns mixed into the offerings.

A cool red aloe or gaster­aloe hybrid.

Another aloe or aloe hybrid with cool red sum­mer coloring.

Aloe andon­gen­sis, a species with gen­tle spots and a dis­tinct gold aura.

The fuzzed flower buds of Aloe tomen­tosa. The plant is a pretty basic green aloe, but these woolly flow­ers make up for the ordi­nary plant.

Espos­toa lanata: Was it Freud who said, ‘Some­times a suc­cu­lent is just a succulent?’

One of the var­ie­gated forms of Agave lophan­tha, a nice lit­tle spiky bun­dle not much over a foot across at this point.

A nice boxed euphor­bia specimen.

Euphor­bia polyg­ona, one of many Old-World euphor­bias that mimic New-World cactus.

And a real New World cac­tus, one of the weirdly blue-colored species in the genus Pilosocereus. The owner needed to look up the exact species, but he said it wasn’t the more com­mon azureus.

I really flaked on the name of this one. Maybe one of the stapelia rel­a­tives? EDIT 7/16/2010: Thanks to Candy, who has iden­ti­fied this plant as Euphor­bia pug­ni­formis f. cristata.

There was this short lit­tle plant with a bul­bous, suc­cu­lent base. It had fewer than a half-dozen leaves. But what stun­ning leaves. I thought they had a great gold-dust effect to them. And then John sug­gested that I wipe the pot­ting soil off the leaves. Okay, no more gold dust effect, but still a great plant. Not all suc­cu­lents are squat, spiny, leaf­less lit­tle audi­tions for a hor­ror movie. This plant is proof. But I think a lot of the other plants I’ve shown are fur­ther proof of that.


July 16 2010 09:19 am | Categories: gardeningplaces | Tags:

9 Responses to “solana succulents”

  1. Stockton Aloe on 17 Jul 2010 at 5:04 am #

    The red aloe is beau­ti­ful. My aloe plants have to get dehy­drated to turn red… but that is because they are dying.

  2. Elephant's Eye on 17 Jul 2010 at 11:31 am #

    Squat, spiny, leaf­less? Not here ;-) We have tree aloes. And apart from ferox we leave the spines to Tex-Mex. I even have a suc­cu­lent Pelargo­nium which fin­ishes the thick fleshy stems with gar­nishes of del­i­cately feath­ered leaves.

  3. Candy "Sweetstuff" Suter on 17 Jul 2010 at 7:12 pm #

    Hi! I am a suc­cu­lent freak that lives in Cal­i­for­nia. I found your blog doing google search for words like suc­cu­lent. I know the name of the weird green suc­cu­lent that you didn’t know the name of. Believe is or not it is a Euphor­bia pug­ni­formis f. cristata. My flickr shot of my big one is here: http://www.flickr.com/photos/sweetstuff1957/2755591935/in/set-72157605400187567/
    I’m a fairly new blog­ger with lots of suc­cu­lents and other stuff to show!

    See ya!

  4. Wendy on 17 Jul 2010 at 7:58 pm #

    What an inter­est­ing show! I think Freud would have been jeal­ous of that cactus.

    I love that red aloe plant.

    To be hon­est, that echev­e­ria leave gives me the willies. Do NOT like it!

  5. Candy "Sweetstuff" Suter on 17 Jul 2010 at 8:32 pm #

    Wendy if you saw the whole plant you would say Wow! This is a hybrid echev­e­ria and they are incred­i­ble! Hard to find and highly prized. I don’t see how you can just judge a leaf!

  6. lostlandscape on 17 Jul 2010 at 8:42 pm #

    Stock­ton, I guess the red aloe wasn’t too rare because it was priced really rea­son­ably. Which of course meant I had to have it…

    EE, for brazenly archi­tec­tural plants I think you’ve got most of the rest of the world beat! I won­der if there’s any­thing that could be said about the Amer­i­can mind­set devel­op­ing the way it did because the coun­try pro­duced such dan­ger­ously spiny plants…

    Candy, thanks for stop­ping by my blog and shar­ing your iden­ti­fi­ca­tion of one of the mys­tery plants. Your Flikr image of it is gorgeous–really stunning!

    Wendy, I think the echev­e­ria leaf wins for being “most unusual,” but like you, I find it more than a lit­tle unset­tling. It looks more than a lit­tle like a tumor growth, don’t you think? I’ve seen that vari­ety offered occa­sion­ally, but it hasn’t made it into my garden.

  7. [ Lost in the Landscape ] » agonizing over the right pot on 19 Jul 2010 at 6:32 am #

    […] last week’s plant shop­ping adven­ture I picked up three lit­tle aloes I wanted to pot up for the back patio. I was sur­prised by how […]

  8. Colleen Miko on 20 Jul 2010 at 7:03 am #

    How I miss my San Diego plants. At one point when liv­ing in Cardiff, I had more than 150 pots of suc­cu­lents on my deck–given away when we moved to WA. My favorites were always the Argy­ro­derma, which I called liv­ing rocks, from S Africa. So odd and unplant-like.

  9. lostlandscape on 21 Jul 2010 at 9:22 pm #

    Colleen, it must have been a shock to have to set­tle for only real rocks after hav­ing grown the argy­ro­der­mas! Loree over at Dan­ger Gar­den adores her suc­cu­lents and spikey plants, and had a lit­tle adven­ture that included some suc­cu­lents in the North­west: http://dangergarden.blogspot.com/2010/07/more-from-jungle-fever.html. But I’m sure the options are lots more lim­ited than down this way.

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