Hen and Chicks

Plant Highlights

Plant Highlights

  • Encephalartos lehmannii

    Karoo cycad

    Highlight Month:

    Nativity:

    This cycad hails from the Eastern Cape of South Africa where it grows on semi-arid sandstone slopes.

    Growth Habit:

    Mature plants can reach 4-6’ tall and form a clump with pleasing blue leaves with recurved tips.

    Growing Requirements:

    E. lehmannii can withstand dry conditions once established in the landscape, prefers full sun, and is frost tolerant (25-30°F).

    Features:

    The name honors Professor Johann Georg Christian Lehmann, a 19th century German botanist, who published several papers on cycads and described the genus Encephalartos.

    Where at Lotusland:

    Cycad Garden

  • Geranium maderense

    Madeira Island geranium

    Highlight Month:

    Nativity:

    Island of Madeira off the northwest coast of Africa

    Growth Habit:

    It is a biennial and produces a flush of tropical-looking leaves about 3’ wide during its first year, and a massive many-branched inflorescence with bright pink flowers its second year.

    Growing Requirements:

    This geranium can tolerate dry, clay soils and is adaptable to sun or shade.

    Features:

    Flower stalks and sepals are covered in purple glandular hairs that prolong its spring interest. Be sure to leave the lower leaf stalks because they form a mound of stilts to prop up the stem.

    Where at Lotusland:

    Fern Garden- where both the straight species and the cultivar ‘Alba’, a white-flowered form grow.

  • Aloe marlothii

    mountain aloe

    Highlight Month:

    Nativity:

    Native to mountainous regions of Mozambique, Zimbabwe, Botswana, and eastern South Africa.

    Growth Habit:

    This tree-like aloe grows to 10’ tall with large spiny leaves. Old leaves persist to cover the trunk in an attractive “skirt.”

    Growing Requirements:

    Full sun, well-drained soils. Hardy to 20°F.

    Features:

    Orange flowers are borne in the winter months on a distinctively branched horizontal inflorescence.

    Where at Lotusland:

    Aloe Garden

  • Xanthorrhoea quadrangulata

    Australian grass tree

    Highlight Month:

    Nativity:

    South Australia

    Growth Habit:

    Grass-like foliage covers its thick woody trunk that can reach 6’ tall. Mature plants produce a 6-12’ stalk bearing small white fragrant flowers in the spring. Slow-growing.

    Growing Requirements:

    Full sun, drought tolerant.

    Features:

    The scientific name is derived from the Greek ‘xanthos’ (yellow) and ‘rheo’ (to flow), in reference to the resin exuded out of the trunk. The resin is used by Aboriginal Australians for spear-making, patching, and as a varnish. The specific epithet comes from the Latin ‘quadra’ (four) and ‘angulata’ (angular), describing the four-sided cross section of the leaf.

    Where at Lotusland:

    Australian Garden near the Visitor’s Center

  • Ficus carica ‘Panache’

    Striped Tiger Fig

    Highlight Month:

    Nativity:

    Garden Origin

    Growth Habit:

    Ficus carica ‘Panache’ will grow 12-20’ tall but can be pruned for ease of picking.

    Growing Requirements:

    Full sun, will need supplemental water in extended periods of drought.

    Features:

    This fig cultivar produces unique variegated fruit with yellow and green stripes! New stems and leaves display a slight variegation as well. Striped tiger figs ripen late in the season compared to other fig selections and our plant at Lotusland is just now producing tasty edible fruit with strawberry-pink, sweet tasting interior flesh. Fig “fruits” are a type of multiple fruit called a syconium, a fleshy, hollow structure lined internally with multiple flowers. Tiny pollinating wasps enter the syconium through an ostiole, the opening on the underside, to pollinate the flowers which later develop into single-seeded fruits (drupelets) that line the interior.

    Where at Lotusland:

    Deciduous Orchard

  • Agave atrovirens

    pulque agave, maguey

    Highlight Month:

    Nativity:

    Mexico (Oaxaca, Puebla, and Veracruz)

    Growth Habit:

    This is the largest of all Agave species and can reach 6-8’ tall with a spread of 8-12’. When mature, the plant will flower and eventually die, but not before producing a 15’ asparagus-like inflorescence with bright yellow flowers.

    Growing Requirements:

    Sun, well-drained soils. Drought tolerant.

    Features:

    A. atrovirens it is one of the agaves fermented in the production of pulque and mezcal. The specific epithet, atrovirens, references its dark green leaves (from the Latin ‘ater’= black/dark and ‘virens’= green).

    Where at Lotusland:

    Dunlap Garden

  • Cleyera japonica

    sakaki

    Highlight Month:

    Nativity:

    Japan, Korea, China

    Growth Habit:

    Cleyera japonica, is a broadleaf evergreen shrub. In the wild, this species grows into a small tree, but when cultivated tends to develop a shrubbier habit, reaching 8-10’ tall by 6-10’ wide. New growth emerges a reddish bronze and fades to dark green. Fragrant creamy white flowers appear in mid-summer.

    Growing Requirements:

    Requires regular irrigation, well drained soils, and light shade.

    Features:

    It is considered a sacred tree to Japanese mythology and Shinto ritual and is used to construct tamagushi, an offering made of a sakaki branch decorated with strips of washi paper, silk, or cotton.

    Where at Lotusland:

    Japanese Garden

  • Nageia nagi

    nagi, Asian bayberry

    Highlight Month:

    Nativity:

    China, Japan, Taiwan

    Growth Habit:

    Trees will reach 30-50’ high and 15-25’ wide with a pyramidal shape. Evergreen leaves remain leathery and glossy and trunks display attractive bark exfoliating in patches.

    Growing Requirements:

    Prefers to grow in well-drained loams but is tolerant of poor soils and drought once established.

    Features:

    This broadleaf conifer is a member of the podocarp family (Podocarpaceae). Members of this species are dioecious, meaning female cones and male catkins are produced on separate plants. This species is uncommon in cultivation.

    Where at Lotusland:

    Both male and female Nageia nagi can be found in the Japanese Garden at Lotusland.

  • Begonia ‘Yanonali’

    Highlight Month:

    Nativity:

    Garden Origin

    Growth Habit:

    This rhizomatous begonia displays wrinkled blue-green leaves with reddish undersides held on erect stems.

    Growing Requirements:

    Shade, moist soils

    Features:

    Rudy Ziesenhenne, world-renowned begonia grower from Santa Barbara, hybridized this cultivar in 1975 and named it after the Chumash chief Yanonali. It is a hybrid of Begonia mazae and B. carrieae. Ziesenhenne operated a nursery from 1934-2005 where Santa Barbara Bowl box office is now located. He was responsible for naming 20 Begonia species and developing 74 hybrids. A native plant and begonia garden now surround the box office in his memory.

    Where at Lotusland:

    Fern Garden

  • Bauhinia yunnanensis

    Yunnan bauhinia

    Highlight Month:

    Nativity:

    South-Central China, Myanmar, and Thailand

    Growth Habit:

    Vines reach 15-20’ long and require a structure or another plant to climb on.

    Growing Requirements:

    Sun or shade

    Features:

    This vining Bauhinia displays light pink flowers from late summer into fall. The genus name honors twin botanist brothers Johan and Gaspard Bauhin and references the two identical lobes making up the leaf.

    Where at Lotusland:

    Fern Garden entrance from Staff Parking Lot

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Photo by Lisa Romerein.

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Photo by Lisa Romerein.