Menu
+ Add

Aloe 'Hellskloof Bells'

Pearson's Aloe

Plant photo of: Aloe 'Hellskloof Bells'
Previous Photo      Next Photo
Information by: San Marcos Growers        Photographer:

 

Description

Upright growing shrubby plant to about 2 feet tall and wide with short lanceolate gray-green leaves that blush maroon in full sun and produce a capitate head of pendant tubular flowers that are pink in bud and open to a soft pastel orange. Plant in full sun to light shade (best foliage color with brightest light) in a well-drained soil and irrigate only occasionally to infrequently. We have had plants not damaged at 25° F and have seen reports that it is hardy to at least 20° F. This unique plant will make a nice addition in the garden planted in the ground or used as a potted specimen. It is a hybrid created by Brian Kemble of the Ruth Bancroft Garden in 1991 that was the result of crossing the beautiful but slow growing, and difficult to cultivate, Aloe pearsonii with the faster growing and easy to grow Aloe mitriformis, which at the time of the cross was called Aloe distans (or A. perfoliata var. distans). Aloe pearsonii hails from an area called Helskloof in the mountainous Richtersveld of the Northern Cape province of South Africa where it forms large colonies with upright columnar branches of stubby red-blushed leaves and the pollen parent Aloe mitriformis is a plant that grows along the coast in the Western Cape province of South Africa. The cross made of these two geographically separated species resulted in a several similar hybrid plants that were distributed and this one was later named by John Trager at the Huntington Botanic Garden. It does best in full sun.

 

Plant Type

Succulent

Height Range

Width Range

Flower Color

n/a

Flower Season

n/a

Leaf Color

Bark Color

n/a

Fruit Color

n/a

Fruit Season

n/a

Sun

Water

Growth Rate

Soil Type

Soil Condition

Soil pH

Adverse Factors

n/a

Design Styles

n/a

Accenting Features

n/a

Seasonal Interest

n/a

Location Uses

n/a

Special Uses

n/a

Attracts Wildlife

n/a

Water Saving Tip:

Adjust the water pressure of you irrigation system.

Spray sprinklers work best at 30 pounds per square inch (psi), and gear and impact rotor sprinklers at 40-60 psi.