Yours is taller but I think we're growing the same cultivar of Aeonium arboreum 'Cyclops'. Big heads of leaves with ginorumous flowers. No flowers on mine yet this year but here is a link to one its flowers last year with my 50 pound Aussie Fletcher for comparison.
Yours is taller but I think we're growing the same cultivar of Aeonium arboreum 'Cyclops'. Big heads of leaves with ginorumous flowers. No flowers on mine yet this year but here is a link to one its flowers last year with my 50 pound Aussie Fletcher for comparison.
Here in Seattle, I might get the adjacent foxglove to get that tall, in July! but no way to get a Aeonium to look like that, unless I have a greenhouse ;)
Wow. You get bragging rights!
ReplyDeleteThat is the darndest thing I've seen! Gorgeous!!
ReplyDeleteYours is taller but I think we're growing the same cultivar of Aeonium arboreum 'Cyclops'. Big heads of leaves with ginorumous flowers. No flowers on mine yet this year but here is a link to one its flowers last year with my 50 pound Aussie Fletcher for comparison.
ReplyDeletehttp://farm3.static.flickr.com/2451/3564676612_001d53d0bf.jpg
Yours is taller but I think we're growing the same cultivar of Aeonium arboreum 'Cyclops'. Big heads of leaves with ginorumous flowers. No flowers on mine yet this year but here is a link to one its flowers last year with my 50 pound Aussie Fletcher for comparison.
ReplyDeletehttp://farm3.static.flickr.com/2451/3564676612_001d53d0bf.jpg
Whoa!!! That's one crazy tall aeonium! We have some purple ones that are about four feet tall (got them at garage sale for free).
ReplyDeleteHere in Seattle, I might get the adjacent foxglove to get that tall, in July! but no way to get a Aeonium to look like that, unless I have a greenhouse ;)
ReplyDeleteNow THAT'S a dance partner!
ReplyDeleteMark, I think you are correct in identifying the variety "Cyclops".
ReplyDeleteThanks for dropping in Y'all.