not in the doldrums

It’s the end of sum­mer and most areas of the gar­den seem to be in some sleepy botan­i­cal tor­por, exhausted from the heat. Not much is bloom­ing. Brown is everywhere.

August succulents with Crassula perfoliata

And then by con­trast there’s this lit­tle over-performing cor­ner, formed in large part by chunks of suc­cu­lents that John has col­lected over the years…

Cas­cad­ing over a back wall are the shock­ing red flow­ers of this cras­sula (I think it’s Cras­sula per­fo­li­ata var. minor, a.k.a. Cras­sula fal­cata). Its com­pan­ions in this photo are a cou­ple of other suc­cu­lents, one of the goth-black aeo­ni­ums (Aeo­nium arboreum ‘Zwartkop’) and what’s likely Grap­topetalum paraguayense. The three are pretty easy to find and like nice combined.

Crassula perfoliata with curled summer leaves

After the win­ter rains the foliage on all of these plants plumps up and looks pretty spec­tac­u­lar. But as sum­mer set­tles in the aeo­nium and and grap­topetalum drop their larger leaves in favor of a tight clus­ter of leaves packed at the grow­ing end of the stalks. The big­ger the leaf the greater the water loss. The cras­sula will retain its leaves, how­ever, although they’ll look a lit­tle shriv­eled in the drought. The fact that the leaves are folded in half prob­a­bly helps to shade the leaf, reduce tran­spi­ra­tion and reduce mois­ture loss.

August succulents with Crassula perfoliata last year

The flow­er­ing of the cras­sula varies by year. The photo above is from this sea­son, actu­ally not one of the bet­ter years. To the left is a shot from last August. This year’s not quite as flashy, but in the slow heat of August and Sep­tem­ber, I’ll take it.

September 01 2009 | Categories: gardeningmy garden | Tags: | 7 Comments »