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Most Aeonium species are native to the Canary Islands, with a small number found in the Cape Verde Islands, Madeira, Morocco, and eastern Africa’s Semien Mountains of Ethiopia. Dry summers and winter rainfall is the norm for their native habitat. Some members of the genus are quite popular as garden and pot plants and have become naturalized in other parts of the world. Some species, however, are still quite rare in cultivation. There are also a number of very popular hybrids and cultivars available. In general, they are quite easy to care for, and their very hardiness makes them landscaping favourites in drier climes. They produce succulent rosettes of waxy leaves, generally at the end of naked stems. Depending on the plant, and the species, the leaves can have attractive variegations. The genus shows a wide variety of growth patterns, from the tall, branching Aeonium arboretum to the minute, spreading Aeonium sedifolium. Many species form low, spreading mats such as Aeonium haworthii, while others, like Aeonium nobile, form a single large, if not spectacular, rosette. Low-growing Aeonium species are Aeonium tabuliforme and Aeonium smithii. Some species are monocarpic, dying after they blossom. The plants are propagated by leaf cuttings, stem cuttings, and by seed. They are related to the genera Sempervivum, Aichryson and Monanthes, which is easy to see from their similar flower and inflorescences. Recently, the genus Greenovia has been placed within Aeonium. Aeonium belongs to the Crassulaceae family. Most species are autumn and spring growers, and should be watered and fed regularly at these periods. Autumn is also a good time for rooting cuttings. Aeonium decorum var. minor is a succulent which forms a little bush of around 20 cm high. The rosettes are about 6 cm in diameter. The leaves are fat and can be jagged. Like many other Aeonium species the colour of the leaves change with the seasons. The leaves of Aeonium decorum var. minor can be green with some touches of brown, or purple when grown in a semi-shaded area but the more sunlight it receives the darker the leaves will be. On offer is a pack of 20 Seeds - Germination Instructions will be sent to your email. |