I love the strongly architectural look of the rounded paddles of prickly pear, especially when a nice mound is tucked in among other plants, peeking out from between them or in back of some lower plants.
They add such a distinctive form and contrast.
But the spines . .
← This is cacanapa ellisiana, a spineless opuntia and if I ever planted one in my small garden, I'd want this. It's a smaller version at only 3 feet high, but it can spread out to about 6 feet.
Many opuntias are very winter hardy, such as the Opuntia humifusa that is native to New England and all the way up into Canada, but this spineless one is a zone 7 plant.
I have some zone 7 sages in my garden, and technically could grow this opuntia here. My garden is now zone 7.
But where would I put one? A container would be ideal, so I could move it where needed and bring it in the garage for winter. But the plant is so much more interesting as it spreads out in irregular shapes.
Planted on its own as a specimen, it isn't as interesting as it is tucked in with other plants. But the orange flowers are great. I love this color, especially as I use orange where I can in the back courtyard.
I could plant one in combination with the cholla out front, with the fernbush and butterfly bush. This shot shows how it looks with other things, including a cholla.
But I probably won't. I like the half circle of what is there now -- the cholla, the fernbush and the butterfly bush. It would seem stiff and crowded to add the opuntia perhaps. And in winter the prickly pear looks pretty awful. Not what I want in the front yard.
I'd really like to add the opuntia in the back garden to see the orange blooms and to have it tucked in with upright sages and agastaches. But there simply isn't room.
I had Opuntia humifusa in Connecticut. It was still a small plant when it succumbed after a couple years to winter wet or too much summer rain, I forget which, but it went.
One alternative might be a much smaller plant:
Cotyledon orbicular, or red edged pig's ear.
It's just a small succulent and won't have the landscape impact of a spreading prickly pear, but it does have the cool blue round pads and I could plant one or two somewhere where I'd see them up close.
It only grows about 6 inches high and a foot wide at most.
High Country Gardens has this and I think I'll order it. I'll figure out later where to put one or two.
The flowers are odd looking, little bells held on high stalks but downward facing, looking goofy.
Here are some examples of pig's ears I saw in January at the Heritage Gardens in California at Pam's development.
It blooms in mid summer. But I'd grow a couple of these for the almost opuntia looking foliage pads, but in a much much smaller size. Maybe even tuck some in along the rock border when I add creeping sedums and speedwells.
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| Plants added by A.I. |
Here's a sort-of idea of how that might look as Gemini A.I. thinks it could look.























































