We are fond of referring to succulents as the ultimate easy-care plants but many species can suffer serious damage or death if exposed to elements they aren’t predisposed to tolerate.
The Propagator: Altman Plants Blog
Kalanchoe tomentosa: Give this fuzzy succulent softy a hug
Posted on October 18 2019
While you may have seized the chance to admire a panda at a zoo, here’s a cute-as-can-be, touch-friendly “panda” of which you can get a really up-close peek … at your home. Every day.
Kalanchoe tomentosa, aka panda plant, is a succulent with long oval-shaped leaves that are densely covered in fuzzy felt. Kind of like a cat’s ears.
Cutting loose: Winter growers wake up, become active in fall
Posted on October 4 2019
Autumn has arrived at last. It feels good to be a succulent geek right about now, especially if you have a bunch of plants exiting summer dormancy. Nothing like looking forward to seeing your aeoniums, your senecios, your sempervivums, get a little wild in wintertime. Of course, for those in colder areas, that festival of life will have to be held indoors, in a space blessed with light.
Winter is coming
Posted on October 2 2019
But our treasured succulents don’t have to unduly suffer
We are fond of referring to succulents as the ultimate easy-care plants but many species can suffer serious damage or death if exposed to elements they aren’t predisposed to tolerate.
Easy-peasy succulent plants for beginners
Posted on August 30 2019
Beginners, black thumbs & back-to-school shoppers, this fleshy, fun, chill group is especially for you.
Succulents have a rep for being waterwise, easy-care, easy-to-love plants. While all are easy to love, some are certainly easier to have looking their best than others.
The plants below are among the more kick-back, neglect-friendly succulents. Lovable living personalities for windowsills, sunny bedrooms, patios, kitchens, gardens, and other plant-worthy spaces.
Embrace positive vibes with succulents
Posted on July 22 2019
We’re daydreaming about an endless summer day on a secluded beach. Gentle waves lapping near our feet. Seabirds carrying on delightful conversation. A pod of dolphins frolicking just beyond the surf.
Enticing aromas emanating from the grill. Sunscreen dutifully lathered on. And an umbrella placed to shade our succulent friends from afternoon rays. In this perfect world, our succulents are definitely coming with.
Mimicry plants: succulent masters of disguise
Posted on July 1 2019
The mimicry plants known as mesembs are the thespians of the succulent world, mind-blowingly adaptable actors often accustomed to harsh, sun-blasted habitats that receive only a few inches of rain a year. They grow in coarse sand with just their translucent tops showing, enabling sunlight to reach the interior of each plant. The rest is underground, which minimizes exposure to extreme elements.
Let hanging succulents hang free on your patio, in your kitchen & living room
Posted on June 25 2019
Cascading succulents should be on anyone’s list for living home & patio decor.
Gardeners often focus on planting things in the ground or in pots that rest well below eye level, yet there is a wide (tall?) world of verdant, pendant possibility that lives above us in the form of hanging plants.
Particular varieties thrive from lofty perches, succulent plants such as string of bananas and Sedum ‘Burrito’. It’s enough to make one hungry! Hanging succulents also excel as “spiller” plants in dish gardens. It’s really hard to imagine potting more than one or two planters without having at least one. They do especially well in bright (but not necessarily super bright) kitchens, sun rooms, and other living spaces, making them some of the best succulents to treat as houseplants.
A multitude of ways to decorate with mini succulents
Posted on June 20 2019
We plant obsessives may not have as much room to garden as our parents and grandparents did. The millennials among us, especially, are said to be sticking to tighter quarters these days — condos, apartments, small houses very close to their neighbors’ small houses. If that is more or less on the money, it’s no wonder that mini succulents seem to be all the rage. They fit in so many spaces, in all manner of planters, from funky novelty ones (so many that it’s hard to pick an example…children’s cowboy boots! toy cars!!) to classic planter bowls stuffed with a dozen or more. While there doesn’t seem to be any published standard for what constitutes a “mini succulent,” we generally go with plants in 2″ or smaller pots. Cuttings count as well, unless we’re talking about, say, a 2′ “sprig” from a 10′ landscape cactus or something.
Meet a business that’s been part of our story for 40 years
Posted on June 14 2019
At Altman Plants, we happily trace our history back more than 40 years ago to the backyard of two cactus & succulent geeks (you can probably guess their last name), but we know well that this incredible journey has not been one embarked on alone. There’s no 40-some years of collecting, growing, and selling unique, weird, and not-so-weird plants without there being plenty of others right there with us. Customers and fellow plant fanatics, from nationwide retailers at the tip of everyone’s tongue to Main Street plant shops that help form the backbone of their communities.
Summertime, and the livin is easy…with succulents
Posted on May 29 2019
Ah, summertime. It’s almost here. If you’re hunting for ideas on what to plant from the succulent & cactus world, we’re here to help. You may know from magazine photos, or from Instagram, or from your own garden that the sheer number of plants to choose from can be overwhelming. So many good ones!
As the largest grower of succulents & cacti in the world, we at Altman Plants know this all too well. Below we present five succulents of summer that sing in temperate gardens or year-round in pots.
All Wrapped Up: We have you covered for spring, Mother’s Day
Posted on April 12 2019
Whether a gift for the person who’s been there for you from the very beginning or something peaceful to herald the awakening of spring, we have you taken care of this season
Mom dropped us some juicy hints. Imagine being wrapped in warm, comforting hugs, like the ones from Mom herself. The cuties in our Love Grows Rosette Succulent Collection arrive in wood-design-wrapped 2.5″ pots. Their larger cousins live in lovingly stickered 3.5″ digs. Both come with an Altman-designed to/from card.
Echeveria ‘Arctic Ice’: Chill out with this rosette succulent stunner
Posted on April 5 2019
“We just survived winter and you wanna gush about an echeveria named ‘Arctic Ice’?” You betcha! This opalescent white beauty will freeze you and other succulent seekers in their tracks…in the best possible way, like the sight of a fluffy arctic fox would.
While no fluff ball, the hen-and-chicks standout — one of our newer patented hybrids — produces concentric, snowball-esque rosettes in lovely mounding style. Its luminous white foliage is liable to throw off soft undertones of icy blue or soft, light purple, depending on factors such as lighting.
Echeveria ‘Lola’ and painted lady echeveria look similar for a reason
Posted on January 29 2019
We recently posted a photo to our Instagram of a cute-as-can-be trio of Echeveria derenbergii, a species lovingly referred to as the “painted lady” echeveria. Painted lady is a quick-to-clump hen-and-chicks species from Mexico that forms small rosettes of triangular green or green-blue leaves with pointed tips. It bears a clear resemblance to another lovely “lady,” the succulent enthusiast favorite Echeveria ‘Lola’, introduced decades ago by famed hybridizer Dick Wright. There’s a reason for that, which we will get to shortly (have a guess as to what that is?). Someone commented on our post that she had thought these three little echeverias were ‘Lola’. Which prompted us to look at a whole bunch of photos of the two plants and do some reading and querying. The comment was totally understandable. There are so many species, hybrids and clones out in the collective “wild” of the nursery trade and hobbyist culture. Pretty much all of us are bound to get confused or unsure from time to time, especially when trying to make definitive IDs from photos.
Treat your valentine to succulent sweethearts
Posted on January 18 2019
Like your special someone, succulents really are something else. Let your love grow this Valentine’s Day season with our Valentine’s Day Rosette Succulent Collection. These living treats are even sweeter than candy hearts or chocolate and they last a whole lot longer.
Each two-pack ordered comes with a specially designed to/from card — we’re aiming to make this a piece of cake for ya! Varieties vary, in that enticing, ooh-I-can’t-wait-to-see way. Check out both styles, in 2.5″ or 3.5″ sizes.
Unleash your succulent spirit indoors
Posted on January 11 2019
As spring weather approaches in some areas, a cool and dreary winter trudges on in others. It is hard to put on our creative gardening cap when the front yard remains dormant and lifeless.
Have no fear! Spruce up your home and decorate indoors with succulents.
A cactus with a magnificent pop of yellow
Posted on January 4 2019
We’re keeping the holiday spirit alive into the new year by going with balloons — balloon cactus, that is. This gorgeous globular bluish-green species is native to southern Brazil and other select South American locales. The view from above is spot on: pale yellow spines radiate from the rusty gold middle atop and down the center of the attractive ribs.
Flowers appear spring to summer, even into fall, providing a yummy pop of yellow on yellow. This one is relatively indoor friendly — a single stem can reach 6 inches in diameter, but over time, clumps may spread to 2 feet or more across.
Succulents are right at home during the holidays
Posted on December 24 2018
This is a tradition-rich and family-heavy time of year for many, with Christmas Day less than a week away & New Year’s Day less than two. There are songs about a sleigh ride and a partridge in a pear tree, toy soldiers as tree ornaments, and pie for dessert. And perhaps a big family game of dominoes. We hear about chestnuts roasting on an open fire, and for some, there might be a blizzard or snowstorm alive outside. Below are succulents that will remind you of this festive season.
Show us your DIY magic for our Holiday Decor Contest
Posted on November 30 2018
We enjoy sharing our succulent craftiness on social media and the blog, but now we want to see yours! How exactly? Well, we are launching our DIY Holiday Decor Contest. We know there’s an amazingly creative minds and hands out there and we want to highlight and celebrate that talent within our virtual community of plant people.
Here’s how to enter. Find us on your favorite social media platform, as long as it’s Facebook, Instagram, or Pinterest. Send us a photo, by Dec. 31, showcasing your holiday-style DIY magic with succulents. It can be pretty much any DIY-style holiday-themed project, just as long as it involves succulents. We will be guided by a fairly broad interpretation of what it means to be holiday-themed.
Give the gift of succulents
Posted on November 16 2018
Can you believe the holidays are all but here? Good news for you: Succulents make super gifts for the favorite people in your life. These living treasures add gratifying, dramatic, year-round cheer and they do so without the need for batteries or USB cables or WiFi integration. And they don’t hit you up for attention during the holiday rush.
Our holiday collections (here & here) make gift giving simple, including succulents that arrive with their own cozy display “wrapping paper” — some in birch-style pot wraps, some in Grinch-inspired wraps. They’ll work splendidly as gifts and as living holiday decorations. And when the holidays end, remove the wraps and enjoy the plants all year long.
Begin your #holidaysucculent shopping at our shop. Merry Succulenting!A colorful team (of succulents) you’ll wanna root for
Posted on November 09 2018
Perhaps you’ve noticed, perhaps not, that football season is well under way, from the Friday night lights of high school ball (already winding down) to Saturday’s rousing collegiate showdowns, to the bruising glitz of the NFL on Sunday. And Monday. Um, Thursday too.
Calico Kitten crassula — catnip for succulent geeks
Posted on November 02 2018
A trailing succulent plant with heart-shaped leaves of lemony cream, green and pink? Meow! We are so in. How ’bout you? The crassula (Crassula marginalis rubra ‘Variegata’) we lovingly call calico kitten is an absolute boss of a pendant-minded plant, highly recommended as a way to step up your hanging basket game. The variegated foliage positively leaps off a green hanging backdrop of Sedum ‘Burrito’ and Senecio radicans (string of bananas). Like a frisky, feisty kitty leaving its hind paws for a swipe at an irresistible target of string. Or yarn. Or shoelaces. Calico kitten will also nicely spills over retaining walls, borders and planter bowls.
When to water succulents … rules of thumb are made to be broken
Posted on October 26 2018
It seems simple enough. Put plant in ground. Water plant when it’s thirsty. Watch plant, and your smiles, grow wider and taller. Hooray for plant!
When it comes to when and how much to water, however, what would seem like an elementary exercise inevitably turns out to be more involved. But don’t fret. You got this; we know it! A good place to start is to water thoroughly when the soil is completely dry to the touch, and not just at the surface but down by the roots. This is especially true for a plant during its active growing season (more on that below). When in doubt, procure a water meter.
Succulents can be a juicy source for costume ideas
Posted on October 19 2018
So you’re skilled with a sewing machine or are an imaginative repurposer of a variety of materials. Yay! And you’re thirsty — hungry! — for a novel costume and willing to spend this entire coming weekend creating it. See? We have you all figured out, heh heh. Well, we happen to be conveniently adept at compiling silly suggestions for DIY projects, yet we’re perfectly content to let others transform them into reality. Our big tip: Use felt. Loads and loads of felt. These theoretically costume-inspiring living treasures are regularly obtainable at shopaltmanplants.com.
This sedum delivers a hot storm of color
Posted on October 11 2018
Would you care to make a statement … in your garden? On your patio? You’d be hard-pressed to make a quiet one by slotting in Sedum adolphi Firestorm™. More like a searing proclamation — in prime condition (lots of light), the leaf margins scream out as if they’re sear marks. Orange-red ones. The middle is golden yellow to greenish yellow. Clusters of star-shaped white flowers burst forth seasonally.
If an echeveria were a jeweled lizard
Posted on September 25 2018
If you admire reptilian motifs but can do without slithering or hissing, then you ought to consider giving Echeveria purpusorum a spot in your garden or new planter. Or scale up and sprinkle several here and there. We imagine it would pass muster, with its enticing, irregular reddish-brown spots, particularly on the outside of the short, pointy leaves. More of a finely mottled pattern graces the inside. Leaf color will be some form of green, punctuated by red margins. Check out those dynamite flowers.
A petite purple people charmer for your windowsill & patio
Posted on August 31 2018
Sometimes fabulous prizes come in small packages. This is particularly true with succulents. Take Anacampseros rufescens (sand rose), a diminutive cutie that’s ideal in a windowsill pot or as a dish garden accent. But that’s not all! In a garden, over time, it will spread to become a miniature ground cover of green-purple rosettes, with white hairs along the stems adding a nice contrast.
Befriend this mutant jade plant character
Posted on July 20 2018
We have an incredible summer blockbuster for you. Instead of some silly popcorn movie, though, we’re talking about a succulent full of freakish star power. It’s pretty much a given that the mention of Crassula ovata ‘Gollum’ is going to elicit a “my precious” response from someone. Some geek. (Like us.) Sorry, non-“Lord of the Rings”-fan gardeners. Unlike the Gollum character himself, though, it’s a rather cheery, desirable form. A super bonsai candidate. If you’ve seen this monstrose jade plant form while out and about, or have one yourself, you’ll probably agree.
Succulent ‘whatdunits’ — varieties with mysterious plant parents or origins
Posted on June 25 2018
If you’ve been following along with us this month in our email dispatches (sign up here), you know that we’ve been preoccupied by botanical intrigue, particularly as it pertains to how certain succulents came to be. Below you will see some favorites for which answers are at least foggy-ish regarding which plants, precisely, were crossed to create them. Or where they fit into a particular species. Maybe native habitat is unknown. Or maybe nature had a moment of quirkiness and engineered an intriguing “sport.” Why? Because reasons, perhaps. Maybe it’s better to just say “cool plants.”
Echeveria ‘FO-42’, another succulent uncertainty
Posted on June 16 2018
In our previous post, we delved into the “parental” uncertainty that’s part of the history of Echeveria ‘Perle von Nurnberg’, a very beautiful and quite popular hybrid. This time, we have another rosette-style succulent, Echeveria ‘FO-42’, for which there have been questions regarding what it is exactly and where it fits within the genus Echeveria.
A ‘Perle’ of All Time Elegance
Posted on June 8 2018
June finds us swooning over one of our succulent besties — Echeveria ‘Perle von Nurnberg’. For this post we’ll mark PVN’s heritage of sorts (well, its breeder’s) by adding the umlaut: Echeveria ‘Perle von Nürnberg’. An amazing abundance of shiny hybrids have followed since ‘Perle’ arrived in the 1930s, but there’s a reason why it was a must-include in our Succulents All Time Favorites Collection on Amazon.
One small grafted step for cactus: Moon cacti
Posted on May 4 2018
For May, we want to give you a taste of lollipop-look-alike cacti with otherworldly “flavor.” They are brightly colored confections called moon cacti: little spheres of vividness from the genus Gymnocalycium. The challenge with these sweeties is one of chlorophyll, or the lack of it.
It’s a succulent sunrise: Anacampseros telephiastrum variegata
Posted on Aril 04 2018
Kind of like a sunrise, or glittering jewels, this adorable little succulent lights up any nook or dish garden with a ravishing mix of pink, green, and creamy ivory or yellow. We’re pretty sure it’s not the sunrise the Eagles first sang about in 1973. Anyway, Anacampseros telephiastrum variegata, aka Anacampseros telep...
It’s a succulent sunrise: Anacampseros telephiastrum variegata
Posted on April 04 2018
Anacampseros telephiastrum variegata, an adorable little mat-forming succulent, lights up any space or dish garden with a ravishing mix of pink, green, and creamy ivory or yellow. It doesn’t tolerate intense heat or strong, direct sunlight for extended periods of time. Prefers bright, filtered light and temperate clima...
Unleash your succulent spirit indoors
Posted on March 08 2018
As spring weather approaches in some areas, a cool and dreary winter trudges on in others. It is hard to put on our creative gardening cap when the front yard remains dormant and lifeless. Have no fear! Spruce up your home and decorate indoors with succulents. Succulents have a unique shape, size, and texture in compar...
Light up your space with some juicy ‘Aurora’ sedum beans
Posted on March 02 2018
Thanks to its darling little round leaves, Sedum rubrotinctum is affectionately known by monikers that may stir up one’s appetite, namely pork and beans and jelly bean plant. The cultivar ‘Aurora’ adds a dimension that has us looking skyward rather than to our bellies. As we understand it, this especially pink and crea...
Luminous jelly beans: Sedum rubrotinctum ‘Aurora’
Posted on March 01 2018
Sedum rubrotinctum ‘Aurora’ is an especially pink cultivar of the stonecrop succulent known as pork and beans or jelly bean plant. This attractive ground-cover form should stay to about 6 inches high but it can spread to about 3 feet, in part because it roots easily from stems and leaves. Look for Sedum rubrotinctum ‘A...
Garnish your garden with Echeveria ‘Lime n’ Chile’
Posted on February 17 2018
Many of us enjoy a lime or lemon wedge with select tasty beverages, so why not enhance the look and liveliness of our succulent-adorned spaces in a similar spirit? We heartily endorse Echeveria 'Lime n' Chile' for this role. It forms frosty lime-green rosettes of chunky leaves, the tips of which may turn a spicy pink-r...
More than just Copiapoa cacti in Chile
Posted on February 03 2018
In November, Altman Plants succulent plant development mgr. Kelly Griffin and his wife, Denise, traveled to Chile for a week of marveling at Copiapoa cacti., but they also enjoyed seeing wildlife as well as non-cactus flora. With that in mind, please enjoy the decidedly non-cactus photo essay below. Read part one of Ke...
Add zest, spice with Echeveria ‘Lime n’ Chile’
Posted on January 31 2018
Echeveria ‘Lime n’ Chile’ is an Altman Plants original hybrid that forms rosettes of chunky lime-green leaves and produces a veritable bouquet of tangerine/gold flowers. Look for Echeveria ‘Lime n’ Chile’ on our retail shop or wholesale shop. The post Add zest, spice with Echeveria ‘Lime n’ Chile’ appeared first on Alt...
Copiapoa cacti in Chile: location, location, location
Posted on January 29 2018
Editor's note: In November, Altman Plants succulent plant development mgr. Kelly Griffin and his wife, Denise, traveled to Chile for a week of marveling at Copiapoa cacti. They also took in non-plant sights, admired the wildlife and, of course, indulged in the food, if not exclusively Chilean cuisine. They also toured...
Chile offers cornucopia of Copiapoa cacti
Posted on January 20 2018
Editor's note: In November, Altman Plants succulent plant development mgr. Kelly Griffin and his wife, Denise, traveled to Chile to, more or less, see as many Copiapoa cacti as possible in a week's time. They also took in non-cactus sights, admired the wildlife and, of course, indulged in the food, if not always Chilea...
Caught in the grip of succulent jaws
Posted on January 03 2018
Faucaria tigrina (tiger jaws), a native of South Africa, is a clump-forming succulent with thick, fleshy, triangular green leaves that are lined with soft, recurved teeth. Watch our tiger jaws whisperer Tom get up-close and personal with this striking plant. Look for Faucaria tigrina at our retail shop or wholesale sho...
Tiger jaws you can touch without losing a hand
Posted on January 05 2018
"Hear me roar," we might imagine this succulent to say if it possessed vocal cords. Fabulously clump-forming and nearly stemless, Faucaria tigrina gets its common name from the thick, soft-teeth-lined, grayish-green leaves that give the appearance of open jaws. Of course, those aren't the teeth we have in mind when we...
A menu loaded with succulents, from small plates to party platters
Posted on December 22 2017
Last week in this space, we got a little playful, a bit wild even, in talking about succulents with animal-inspired names, from Crassula ‘Calico Kitten’ to zebra plant (Haworthia spp.). At the risk of being called birdbrains or accused of monkeying around too much, we can’t help but presume it’s only a natural progression to move this topic of names to the realm of food. Especially during the time of year when our faces are ever so close to all matters of yummy dishes and treats.
Adopt a zebra … plant for your windowsill
Posted on December 15 2017
It’s December and ooh baby isn’t it cold outside? Maybe even snow on the ground? That doesn’t mean you’re shut out from succulent planting until spring, though. We happen to be rather fond of a species that can not only live happily indoors year-round but also weather the dim tones of winter just fine: Haworthia fasciata, better known as zebra plant.
Some ‘animal’ succulents worth adopting into the family
Posted on December 02 2017
Have pets? Do you lovingly refer to them as your fur babies? All the time? Stickers on the car back window? It’s perfectly OK if you do. This is a judgment-free zone. After all, whether they be dogs, cats, birds, iguanas, velociraptors, or all of the above plus pot belly pigs and chickens, they are beloved members of the family. But where do your succulents fit on that pecking order?
A pet zebra for your home
Posted on December 6 2017
Zebra plant was one of the species that turned our succulent guru Tom Jesch onto succulents. This haworthia can tolerate low light better than can most succulents, making it a fabulous choice for a spot indoors.
Plants for Positivity: Prescribe yourself plenty of garden & nature time
Posted on March 31 2020
Plants have a special way of elevating our moods, lifting our spirits, and providing a sense of wonder. But they possess far more utility than just a knack for making us humans feel good. Simply put, we need plants for our survival.
From food and exercise to medicine and recuperation, so much that is healthy to beneficial has a connection to the colorful, chlorophyll-containing wonders that make up the plant kingdom. In this first installment, we focus on a host of general well-being benefits.
[caption id="attachment_11823" align="alignleft" width="449"] Brina Blum on Unsplash[/caption]
Plants promote positive vibes & more tangible goodness
Plants have a way of providing an emotional pick-me-up. Being around plants and nature makes people happier. This almost certainly feels instinctively true for plant lovers, but it’s borne out by research.
• "There is increasing awareness among researchers and health practitioners of the potential health benefits derived from gardening activities.
• Studies have shown that gardening increases individual's life satisfaction, vigor, psychological well-being, positive effects, sense of community, and cognitive function.
• Reductions in stress, anger, fatigue, and depression and anxiety symptoms have also been documented."
Source: sciencedirect.com
“Houseplants reduce stress and anxiety. According to a study published in the Journal of Physiological Anthropology, active interaction with indoor plants (like touching and smelling) can reduce physiological and psychological stress. What's more, even the potting soil can help you keep a handle on daily stress and anxiety.”
Source: Forbes.com
[caption id="attachment_11824" align="alignright" width="260"] Photo by Liana Mikah on Unsplash[/caption]
“There is so much there to share and bond over, from the nuts and bolts of gardening to the emotional and spiritual connections we can experience with our gardens.”
Source: “10 Mental Health Benefits of Gardening”, psychologytoday.com
[caption id="attachment_11834" align="alignleft" width="229"] Photo by Olena Sergienko on Unsplash[/caption]
Concentration and Memory
“Being around plants helps people concentrate better in the home and workplace. Studies show that tasks performed while under the calming influence of nature are performed better and with greater accuracy, yielding a higher quality result. Moreover, being outside in a natural environment can improve memory performance and attention span by twenty percent.”
Source: Texas A&M AgriLife Extension
Healing
“Shrubs, trees, and flowers have a practical application in hospitals: The presence of plants in patient recovery rooms greatly reduces the time necessary to heal. The soothing effects of ornamental flowers and plants are so great that simply having daily views of flowers and other ornamental plants in landscaped areas outside patient recover rooms significantly speeds up recovery time. Another technique to decrease recovery time is horticulture therapy, where patients care for and nurture plants themselves. Patients who physically interact with plants experience a significantly reduced recovery time after medical procedures.”
Source: Texas A&M AgriLife Extension
[caption id="attachment_11838" align="alignright" width="443"] Photo by Benjamin Combs on Unsplash[/caption]
Plants make people happy
“Adding flowers to your home or work environment reduces your perceived stress levels and makes you feel more relaxed, secure, and happy. Flowers can help you achieve a more optimistic outlook on your life, bringing you both pleasing visual stimulation and helping you to increase your perceived happiness.”
Source: Texas A&M AgriLife Extension
Plants allow you to get physical
Step it up in the garden to your heart’s content…and benefit. You might be surprised how many steps you can pile up and calories you can burn while gardening, moving from one end of your space to the next, planting, pruning, weeding, harvesting, feeding, watering. The digging, the pulling, the stretching. We feel a sweat coming on just from the thought.
Burning calories and lowering your blood pressure are just two of the benefits to the mind and body from gardening, says this Good Housekeeping article. Excerpts below:
Burn calories
"You can burn about 330 calories doing one hour of light gardening and yard work — more than walking at a moderate pace for the same amount of time, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention."
Lower your blood pressure
"Just 30 minutes of moderate-level physical activity most days of the week can prevent and control high blood pressure. In fact, The National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute recommends gardening or raking leaves for 30-45 minutes as examples of how to hit that recommended amount."
The CDC says 2 1/2 hours a week of moderate-level activity, such as gardening, can also reduce the risk for obesity, type 2 diabetes, osteoporosis, heart disease, stroke, depression, colon cancer, and premature death.
Source: “Gardening Health and Safety Tips,” Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Like us, you've probably been spending even more time this month with your plants. Who knew that weeding, pruning, picking, raking, digging, planting, and repotting were so good for one's health? Keep it up and keep the positive, plant-filled vibes flowing.
The post Plants for Positivity: Prescribe yourself plenty of garden & nature time appeared first on Altman Plants.
Adorn your space with this little jewel
Posted on November 27 2017
We succulent lovers sure do live in a golden age of gorgeous variety. Pachyveria 'Glauca', aka "little jewel," is a Pachyphytum × Echeveria mash-up — a cross between two members of the family Crassulaceae.
Heir to the throne: Echeveria ‘Black Prince’
Posted on October 20 2017
Echeveria ‘Black Prince’ a noble choice for the garden, patio, or a bright nook indoors
The small, dark, and handsome echeveria known as 'Black Prince' has to make any list of Halloween-appropriate succulents. It's unusual for an echeveria in that its rosettes often appear to be nearly black. Combine that with its glowing green center and striking red flowers, and this dark hens-and-chicks succulent just might startle an unsuspecting trick-or-treater. (Of course, it helps to have some well-placed, oversized spiders and bloodshot monster eyes nearby.)
Brave the world of mutant succulents
Posted on October 13 2017
Agaves rule!
Posted on October 06 2017
Mimicry plants: succulent masters of disguise
Posted on September 29 2017
Cutting loose: Winter growers wake up, become active in fall
Posted on September 22 2017
Hanging around with string of bananas
Posted on September 20 2017
Senecio radicans is commonly known as string of bananas because its cascading stems resemble strings and strings and strings of green bananas. Those pendant “strings,” which can hang to 5 feet […]
The post Hanging around with string of bananas appeared first on Altman Plants.
Peeling back the story of Senecio radicans: string of bananas
Posted on September 15 2017
This South African native is commonly known as string of bananas because it resembles...strings and strings and strings of green bananas. It’s amazing how well that common name thing can work.
Chroma crazy: Variegated plants like catnip for succulent fanatics
Posted on September 08 2017
We succulent geeks are absolute suckers for color, color combos, and colorful oddities.
Leaves with streaks, splotches, mottled patterns of various hues. Whether it’s naturally occurring, encouraged through cultivation, or brought about by seasonal or environmental influences, variegated foliage is like catnip for collectors and gardeners alike.
Consider the eye candy below a tease to a deeper exploration to come at a later date.
Introducing fresh (made up) references for cultivar names…
Posted on September 01 2017
One of the neatest parts about becoming a parent is getting to name another human being. You can pretty much seal your child’s fate with a shrewdly befitting (or not especially beneficial) name. We might be overselling that power a bit, true, but plant breeders bear a similar responsibility when naming the cultivated varieties they create.
This old man, he plays it cool
Posted on August 25 2017
The cactus family is chock-full of old men and old ladies. Enough so that they deserve their own membership wing in the AARP. Ha, we kid, but the "old ..." cacti all share an eye-catching attribute: a coat of protective white hairs. That hairiness, while not of identical density, can make it tough for nonexperts to distinguish individual species from one another. Today, though, we’re singling out one senior cactus in particular: Oreocereus celsianus, aka old man of the Andes. The prefix, Oreo, means "mountain," from the Greek word oros.
PEELING BACK THE STORY OF SENECIO RADICANS: STRING OF BANANAS
Posted on August 18 2017
Forgive us if we ever get a bit flowery in our musings about cacti. These plants are often noted for their spiny (not thorny) toughness, but — beyond cactus geeks — probably don’t receive their proper due for all the textures, shapes, and hues they possess. Their satiny, out-of-this-world flowers are some of the most fetching ones on the planet. Alluring reds, pinks, oranges, yellows, whites. Even purple. Some run small while many are certifiably ginormous. (The flowers of Hylocereus undatus — dragon fruit — can exceed 12 inches in length.) Many bloom after dark when other plants have closed up their displays for the night.
Aloes: striking exteriors, soothing interiors
Posted on August 11 2017
Don't be shy about expressing love of succulents indoors
Posted on August 04 2017
Explore this golden-yellow sphere's galaxy
Posted on July 28 2017
Explore the rugged character known as golden barrel cactus
Posted on July 25 2017
Altman Plants team members display their plant geekery
Posted on July 20 2017
This lineup of crassulas is stacked
Posted on July 13 2017
Have stretched-out succulents? Treat them to more light
Posted on July 07 2017
Succulents to keep you company during shady respites
Posted on June 30 2017
Brighten your landscape with shy-but-strong Echeveria 'Lola'
Posted on June 23 2017
#nofilter living no ideal for most succulents — add a tree
Posted on June 16 2017
A happy-glow-lucky, shy-but-strong 'Lola'
Posted on June 16 2017
BFFs for your succulents
Posted on June 08 2017
Five picks for heat-enduring, non-prickly succulents
Posted on June 02 2017
A tale about tails ... 'Burrito' tails
Posted on May 30 2017
Gardeners & Pests: not a love story
Posted on May 26 2017
In the ground versus containers
Posted on May 19 2017
Is Your Water Working for You?
Posted on May 16 2017
Cacti in the Mist
Posted on April 21 2017
Living Wall Art
Posted on March 22 2017
Pet (Your) Plant
Posted on March 10 2017
Cleaning Your Cyclamen
Posted on March 09 2017
Something Sweet This Spring
Posted on March 07 2017
Altman Plants purchases EuroAmerican inventory, in escrow on property
Posted on March 02 2017
5 Reasons to Love Succulents
Posted on March 01 2017
Decorating Indoors with Succulents
Posted on March 01 2017
Succulent Sunshine - Sedeveria 'Blue Elf'
Posted on February 21 2017
A Match Made in Heaven - Sedeveria 'Blue Elf'
Posted on February 17 2017
Plants For Even Hotter Weather
Posted on February 16 2017
My Valentine Succulent Bouquet
Posted on February 10 2017
Rainstorm Ready – Preparing Your Garden
Posted on February 09 2017
Bashfully Beautiful - Graptoveria 'Bashful'™
Posted on January 13 2017
Rosy Cheeks Are In - ‘Bashful’™
Posted on January 13 2017
Poinsettias - Our Favorite Holiday Bloom
Posted on December 28 2016
How Altman Plants is beating the drought
Posted on December 22 2016
Crassula tetragona - A Succulent For All Seasons
Posted on December 21 2016
Crassula tetragona "Mini Pine Tree"
Posted on December 05 2016
Holiday Succulent Wreath
Posted on December 05 2016