
The silly common name actually suits its plump rosettes of pale bluish succulent leaves. Mexican snowball, Echeveria elegans, forms small colonies that might resemble stashes of snowballs. Individual rosettes are circular, and a bit wider than tall. The widest are four inches or so across. The evergreen leaves are as neatly radial as scales of a pine cone.
Some may know Mexican snowball, and various other species of Echeveria and related Sempervivum, as hen and chicks. Big rosettes can produce so many small pups around their edges that they are reminiscent of mother hens surrounded by their huddled chicks. These pups are quite easy to separate for plugging into pots or elsewhere in the garden.
Mexican snowball is happiest in sunny situations with rather regular watering, but should tolerate a bit of shade and lapses of watering. For small trees in big pots, it can cover the surface of the potting media nicely. Pups plugged into crevices of stone walls might grow into clinging colonies. Tiny pink flowers with yellow tips bloom on wiry stems about now.
That is an amusing name. I have grown a lot fonder of Echeveria recently.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Yes, it is silly, and somehow makes this appealing perennial even more appealing.
LikeLike
That common name is news to me! I have several.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Yes, but isn’t it a cool name?
LikeLiked by 1 person
I was expecting a tropical Viburnum!
LikeLiked by 1 person
Of, of course. I did not think of that.
LikeLike