DarkSpark
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wow...I've got to get myself one of those spiral aloes...
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Fibonacci...the Golden spiral.Anyone growing Aloe polyphylla? It's a way cool species with spairal growth.
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They look pink to me. And I haven't seen that species or type of aloe before. I'm pretty sure I have some pups of Aloe vera, I use it for burns and skin lesions and such, have had the mother plant for years.Those flowers appeared pinkish to me! Then again i may be wrong. That aloe pic seamaiden shared is an interesting color pattern.
:)
So, here's something REALLY weird. My own aloe vera? That I've had for decades? She came from SoCal. Grown out back, on the balcony, in the kitchen window, and then next to my mother's swimming pool in a southwestern area. Totally took the sun, never got too harsh for it. Up here? I absolutely CANNOT let it be in full sun or it turns brown and stops growing.
Do you think I needed to acclimatize it going from full SoCal sun to NorCal (looking at a map I think I'm central, but hey)? Almost the slightest exposure seems to turn it brown. Maybe the elevation is the problem, do you think? In SoCal it was at around 1,000', here it's 2,500'. That's what's throwing me, the fact that it was fine in full sun all its life, just a few hundred miles south of here.You could probably acclimatize it to full sun. ALL plants need acclimation to full sun if they've been growing in shade for a while, even the most sun hardy species like desert cacti. If growing in shade, they do not express high quantities of photoprotective chemicals; once moved into full sun, they will burn. Going red/brown is a sign of the plant trying to protect itself through pigment production. It might succeed at inhibiting burn, but it will cease growth at the same time. Given enough time, it will green up and continue to grow. However, if you acclimatize it slowly, it should stay green and actively growing for the entire process.