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palmbob

Puya photos from the Huntington (southern California)

palmbob
7 years ago

Most amazing Puya collection I have seen... sadly way too many are not identified, so their names are as yet unknown... could by hybrids. Who knows... but amazing flowers.

Not 100% sure all are true Puya alpestris, but all grow in the same clump with the same shaped foliage... just some flowers at one end of the clump and some at the other (clump is labeled in this case).

Comments (23)

  • palmbob
    Original Author
    7 years ago

    Here are a few more plants shots from other plants nearby that either are, or aren't labeled, but the foliage matches

  • palmbob
    Original Author
    7 years ago

    Here is some Puya beteroana flowers... these bloom about 1.5 months earlier than most of these other Puyas, and plants are huge (foliage quite different from Puya alpestris and super nasty)

  • palmbob
    Original Author
    7 years ago

    Puya chilensis is a similar sized and shaped plant to P berteroana (these two species are the tallest plants, and flower panicles in the gardens), but blooms are brilliant yellow/chartreuse and flowering time about about 2 weeks ago.

  • palmbob
    Original Author
    7 years ago

    here is a smaller species (only about 2' tall at the tallest) called Puya assurgens. Very different flowers

  • palmbob
    Original Author
    7 years ago

    Here is a plant identified as Puya coerulea var. violacea... this plant I have seen in multiple gardens and it is always the same, so I have a pretty good feeling this plant is correctly identified at least

  • palmbob
    Original Author
    7 years ago

    Another low-growing species, Puya butcheriana looks a lot like Puya assurgens, only with dark purple flowers rather than green ones. Plant itself is nasty and spiny, too, while assurgens tends to be much more 'user friendly'.

  • palmbob
    Original Author
    7 years ago

    Puya dyckioides sadly flowers at a completely different time of year, and can't seem to get it in active flower. Oh well

  • palmbob
    Original Author
    7 years ago

    Though flower spikes of Puya ferruginea are tall with lots of nice fuzzy pink on them, the flowers themselves are somewhat small, nearly black, and a bit hard to photograph.

  • Alain (Pacifica, CA;10a)
    7 years ago

    wow amazing and thank you for sharing! will put this on my list to visit next year.

  • palmbob
    Original Author
    7 years ago

    Puya floccosa is a pretty nice plant with at least fairly nice flowers and is a somewhat more manageable size for a PUya.

  • palmbob
    Original Author
    7 years ago

    Puya mirabilis here is growing at the Los Angeles arboretum, some 10 miles maybe from the Huntington. Small, user friendly species that blooms in the fall

  • palmbob
    Original Author
    7 years ago

    PUya spathacea has bright red, showy flower panicles with purple-blue or green-turquoise flowers.

  • palmbob
    Original Author
    7 years ago

    Puya ultima is a weird plant... soft, smooth, bright green wide leaves and weeping flower stalks.

  • palmbob
    Original Author
    7 years ago

    PUya venusta looks like a dwarf form of PUya coerulea, though flowers are at least a bit more consistent. I suspect that some of the Puya coerulea plant is actually a Puya venusta plant growing into it... but no idea for sure. This is the only 'spectacular species in which I don't have to use zoom to take close ups of the flowers.

  • palmbob
    Original Author
    7 years ago

    Puya wrightii is a bit less than spectacular, and is the first of the Puyas to bloom each year (late January to February).

  • SoCal Stewart (San Diego, Ca Zone 10A/10B)
    7 years ago

    Thank you for taking the time to post pictures palmbob.

    So these are considered bromeliads, right? Not cacti or succulents? Are bromeliads considered cacti/succulents? Please excuse my ignorance. Maybe understanding this will help me in my searches.

    Thamks, Tyler

  • palmbob
    Original Author
    7 years ago

    This last Puya is not identified, but is unique and probably should not be that hard to figure out... flower stalks are very tall, slender with long, twisted, drooping flowers that are a variety of subtle colors... every thing coated in a thick fuzzy coppery velvet.

  • aloebot
    7 years ago

    The first time I saw Puya alpestris I was blown away. A wicked plant with such beautiful flowers. As you say, not a user friendly plant. In another life with acres to landscape I would plant these everywhere.

  • Pagan
    7 years ago
    last modified: 7 years ago

    Well, this is tears-inducing. It's irritating enough that agaves will not tolerate Zone 7 winters. Now I'm adding puya to that list too. Hmp.

  • Alain (Pacifica, CA;10a)
    7 years ago

    Pagan, several of the small ones do well in pots (mirabilis, alpestris). If you have a greenhouse or well protected area for the winter you could enjoy some of the blooms.

  • Kara 9b SF Bay Area CA
    7 years ago

    So beautiful! I just bought my first Puya. It's a Puya chilensis. Thanks for the pics of the Puya chilensis, makes me love my plant even more. Looking at all your pics makes me want a ton more Puyas. I have a least a decade before mine blooms, but I don't mind makes it more exciting when they do. They're so unique, but still so lovely. I bet hummers go crazy for the flowers:).

  • gdinieontarioz5
    7 years ago

    Wow and wow and wow. I definitely don't want to move, but these at least made me think of it for one little moment ;-).