Last seen: May 24, 2016
Nice Yuccas!! Your neomexicana looks happier than mine! We have Yucca moths up here even though 'they' say Yuccas aren't native to Massachusetts. B...
sure looks like Y. rostrata. Based on that photo I see no reason to think it's anything but Y. rostrata.
Hi Aaron,Some Y. rostratas have little to no serrations along the leaf margin, so your Yucca may still be a rostrata. Please post some photos when yo...
I have a Yucca pallida doing the same (dieing off). I've seen this occur before and sometimes a new offshoot will emerge from the underground roots. ...
Great garden! Loads of growth! Love that Siam Ruby!!!
Hi Paul,did your Y. neomexicana die back from winter cold? It seems like many Yuccas from the Utah area don't like my climate and will die back and r...
Photo #1 sure looks to be a Y. elata or perhaps Y. baileyi, angustissima, or a form of glauca.Photo#2 sure looks like a Y. rostrata.Photo#3 does not l...
one way to ID Y. rostrata is that the leaf edge may have tiny serrations, predominantly along the part of the leaf closest to the trunk. Do your seed...
great garden! Love the photos. Your Sequioadendron is looking great! I remember mine growing 3' per year.
Yes, my Y. gloriosa variegata died to the ground after blooming too. Loads of suckers now. Mine did get a foot of trunk but that's because it too ma...
It's very interesting to hear your rostratas were seed grown from El Paso. Perhaps the seed is hybrid with another Yucca such as elata or another nar...
Nice Y. neomexicana......looks much better than mine!
It's a beauty!!!!
very nice rostratas. I just took a photo of a Yucca filamentosa x rostrata. I hope these will tolerate more cold and moisture than Y. rostrata. Thi...
your torreyi is really taking off!!
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