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Displaying results for: Agave

Agave salmiana Green Giant Agave


Ruler icon 3-5 ft. high x 4-8 ft. wide

Sun icon Full sun

Thermometer icon USDA zones 7-11

These are big, bold, green Agaves. They are common in central Mexico in scrub desert grassland habitats, mixed with oak and junipers. Mostly solitary plants, they can form widely spaced colonies giving the appearance someone had designed them into the landscape. Long leaves are dark to bright green color as mentioned, which makes them stand out from so many other large blue leaves Agaves. The leaves are guttered, with large marginal teeth and a short, sharp terminal spine. Due to their wide distribution and centuries of human cultivation in Mexico, many named selections exist of these big beauties. Plant them with other large desert shrubs, grassy accent plants, or use a few for solitary specimens with dramatic up-lighting. A. salmiana v. ferox is known for more pronounced mammilate marginal teeth, but with all other similar traits.

Agave desmettiana Tropical Agave


Ruler icon 2-3 ft. high x 2-4 ft. wide

Sun icon Full to part sun

Thermometer icon USDA zones 9-12

These are upright, vase to urn-shaped Agaves with mostly smooth leaf edges and sexy, recurving sword-shaped leaves. They are green to glaucous color with a short, somewhat sharp terminal spine. These are coastal, tropical Agaves suitable as stand-alone xeric landscape features, but they blend and accent other tropical looking plants like Hibiscus, Bougainvillea, Canna lilies, and Tecoma sp. They can acclimate to full sun, but perform quite well in some shade or filtered light. Low maintenance and adaptability to many different design models makes them some of the easiest choices for designers.

Agave desmettiana ‘Variegata’ Variegated Tropical Agave


Ruler icon 2-3 ft. high x 2-4 ft. wide

Sun icon Full to part sun

Thermometer icon USDA zones 9-12

These are upright, vase to urn-shaped Agaves with virtually toothless leaf edges with sexy curving sword-shaped leaves. This desirable selection has green leaves with a ribbon of gold along their margins.  These are coastal, tropical Agaves suitable as stand-alone xeric landscape features, but they blend and accent other tropical looking plants like Hibiscus, Bougainvillea, Canna lilies, and Tecoma sp. They can acclimate to full sun, but perform quite well in some shade or filtered light. Low maintenance and adaptability to many different design models makes them some of the easiest choices for designers.

Agave filifera Thread Leaf Agave


Ruler icon 2-3 ft. high & wide

Sun icon Full to part sun

Thermometer icon USDA zones 8-12

These Agaves have it all! Narrow 3/4 – 1.5 in. wide, lance-shaped green leaves about 1 ft. long, are gently curved to form an artichoke-like rosette with propensity to form clumps of several offsets up to 3-4ft. across. The smooth, toothless margins shred or tear off to create a hairy appearance that stands out from any amount of back-lighting, and they have white strips that form decorative crossing bud imprints on the leaf surfaces. They do have a short but sharp terminal spine, which makes them a bit ferocious, despite their fuzzy animal-like look. They are tolerant of full or part sun, alkaline soils and of course drought conditions. They are native to sky island, pine-forested habitats of central Mexico, which provides a good amount of cold hardiness.

Agave havardiana Havard Agave


Ruler icon 2-3 ft. high x 3-4 ft. wide

Sun icon Full sun

Thermometer icon USDA zone 5-12

These are the quintessential Chihuahuan Agave, occurring in the high deserts of southwest Texas, southern NM and northern Mexico along mountainous slopes, rocky draws and adjacent oak to pine grasslands. They form beautiful blue-gray colored rosettes of wide, slightly guttered leaves that taper to a wicked sharp, gray to black terminal spine, with sharp recurved gray marginal teeth that leave sumptuous bud imprints. These are some of the coldest hardy agaves available in the landscape trade, although to weather cold wet winters, especially with snow, they must be grown with excellent drainage. These are mostly solitary plants, with little to no offsetting and they produce spectacular, widely branched bloom stalks that form tufts of dense flowers adored by pollinators. If you could only pick one Agave for your project, no matter where it is in the west or southwest, choose a Havard Agave. They are bold, beautiful, and tolerant of heat and cold.

Agave lophantha ‘Quadricolor’ Vareiegated A. lophantha, or Quadricolor Lophantha


Ruler icon 1-2 ft. high & wide

Sun icon Full to part sun

Thermometer icon USDA zones 8-12

They are strikingly attractive Agaves, prized for container gardens, but with good draining soil they are perfectly happy in the ground. They prefer morning sun to filtered light in low deserts and full sun in coastal gardens or higher elevation or inland areas. These are small, highly decorative plants with flat, pointed strap-like leaves that form a small ball close to the ground. The leaves are striped with dark green, chartreuse, and bright yellow, with the fourth color of their Quadricolor namesake being a reddish color that shows up in their small, sharp marginal teeth. Like others of this species, these plants are prone to suckering with many pups developing around the larger mother plant.

Agave macroacantha Jet Tip Agave, Black Spined Agave


Ruler icon 1-2 ft. high x 2-3 ft. wide

Sun icon Full to part sun

Thermometer icon USDA zones 9-12

These are beautiful round, clustering Agaves with narrow, rigid powder-blue leaves that are well armed with sharp black teeth and a short formidable jet-black terminal spine. Their natural habitat is open scrub-land of mixed desert shrubs, thorny small trees, and plenty of ephemeral wildflowers. This is why these plants are so well suited for virtually any residential or commercial landscape. They are perfectly at home in well-drained soils, with periodic irrigation, blended with almost any other native or drought adaptive plants. Low maintenance, small and dramatic

Agave montana Mountain Agave


Ruler icon 3-4 ft. high x 4-5 ft. wide

Sun icon Full to part sun

Thermometer icon USDA zones 8-12

These are squatty, wide green leafed, rounded Agaves with distinctive and prominent upward and downward curved sharp marginal teeth and a sharp 1 in. long terminal spine. They are solitary plants that grow in habitat from scrubby foothills up to higher mountainous mixed pine forests of the Sierra Madre Oriental, hence, their common name. Depending on their provenance, some Mountain Agaves can tolerate low temperatures in the single digits, but we conservatively recommend them for USDA zone 8 and warmer. As with other Chihuahuan Agaves, these plants will benefit from being planted in morning sun to filtered mid-day sun, with little to no late afternoon sun in low desert gardens. In upland or coastal locations they do well with full sun and minimal, but regular summer watering. Their adaptability, cold hardiness, attractive bud imprints and symmetrical shape make them a wise choice for many landscape designs

Agave murpheyi Murphey's Agave


Ruler icon 2-4 ft. high x 2-4 ft. wide

Sun icon Full to part sun

Thermometer icon USDA zones 8-12

Murphy’s Agave is a handsome dark blue-green color with narrow, strap-like vertical straight to slightly curved leaves with numerous but small marginal teeth and a short terminal spine. These are clump forming plants with some capable of producing many offsets. They are tough, and adaptable to many garden situations blending in well with native or desert adapted shrubs, trees, ornamental grasses or virtually any other tropical or desert accent plants. Individual, immature plants have a symmetrically rounded natural shape.