smaller echiums

In addi­tion to the spec­tac­u­lar Echium can­di­cans, you can occa­sion­ally find some smaller exam­ples of the the genus. Because of the eco­nom­ics of the plant nurs­ery indus­try, where peo­ple tend to buy stuff that’s in bloom over just about any­thing else, and because these plants have a rel­a­tively short–though spectacular!–blooming (read “saleable”) period, you don’t often see plants of them avail­able. But seeds are a lit­tle eas­ier to come by.

The J.L. Hud­son cat­a­log a lit­tle while back had four echi­ums avail­able, includ­ing can­di­cans (which there is listed under its fas­tu­o­sum syn­onym). Of the oth­ers, E. wild­pretii is occa­sion­ally sold in other seed list­ings, some­times as “Tower of Jew­els.” The plant is a beau­ti­ful rosette of long gray leaves the first year, about eigh­teen inches across, then in the sec­ond (edit, June 3, 2010: or third) year the plant shoots straight up six to ten feet with a con­i­cal tower of dark rose to carmine-red flowers.

Echium wildpretii

Echium wild­pretii, grow­ing wild on the flanks of the Pico del Teide, a dor­mant vol­cano, on the island of Tener­ife. Photo by Grombo, from Wikipedia. [ source ]


My yard, at 60-some by 120-some feet, is maybe a lit­tle larger than typ­i­cal lots in town, but it’s still not huge. A plant that grows like the sky­scrap­ers downtown–narrow but tall–makes a lot of sense for gar­dens like mine, so I bought a big packet of wild­pretii seeds. Here are the baby pix of the fuzzy lit­tle guys, at some­thing like four weeks old:
Echium wildpretii seedlings

A lit­tle more warm weather–if it ever comes back–and they’ll be ready for the gar­den, ready to grow for a year in prepa­ra­tion for an out­ra­geous flow­er­ing next spring. You don’t think a cou­ple dozen or more of these rock­ets going off at once would be too much, do you?

From the Hud­son list­ings I also got some seeds of E. rus­sicum, sim­i­lar in color to wild­pretii and also a bien­nial, but some­thing that’s more on the scale of a typ­i­cal gar­den bor­der. Enor­mous and fab­u­lous is cool, but some­thing that plays well with oth­ers should be nice to have around.

April 19 2008 | Categories: my gardenplant profiles | Tags: | 2 Comments »