Discover and Grow Lovely Aloe Arborescens (torch aloe) By Debra Lee Baldwin, Succulent Expert and Author
One of the most colorful landscape plants in Southern California is Aloe arborescens (torch aloe). This easy-care succulent is perfect for coastal gardens, including those on the Palos Verdes Peninsula.
There’s no need to buy it. It’s so common, it’s a “pass-along plant,” meaning friendly neighbors who grow it will likely give you cuttings.
But before you go knocking on doors, here’s what you need to know to keep Aloe arborescens happy and thriving.
EASY-CARE ALOE
Torch aloe is from southeastern Africa, from Mozambique to Cape Town. Aloe arborescens doesn’t get unmanageably large, although the species name means "treelike."
It isn’t treelike at all. Rather, rosettes form a multi-headed colony over time, which in bloom can be as tall as 7 feet. Such mounds are easy to whack back. Discard the cuttings, tuck them into garden gaps, or pass them along.
A BEACH-LOVER
These dramatic plants do fine exposed to salt spray.
I think of Aloe arborescens as "the Laguna Beach aloe," because it has naturalized along the cliff-top walkways of that city by the sea.
THOSE FLOWERS!
Even as a child, I was fascinated by the flowers. Two-foot-tall coral-red spires of elongated, beadlike buds attract bees and hummingbirds.
Against a blue sky, torch aloe flowers are unforgettable.
Best of all, like the majority of aloes, arborescens blooms midwinter, when little else is going on in our gardens.
GEL AND TEETH
The gel is harmless but can stain clothing. Like its famous relative, Aloe vera, the gel of Aloe arborescens can be used medicinally, although I don’t recommend it. It’s a purgative, meaning it can cause cramping and rapidly clear out the digestive tract (!)
Toothed edges of aloes look intimidating but are no more likely to draw blood than prickles of hardened wax...which they both look and feel like.
FIRE-RETARDANCE
Torch aloe's gel-filled leaves and tendency to form dense mounds make it an effective firebreak.
Several years ago I conducted an informal experiment (see my video, Do Succulents Burn?). I placed cuttings of various commonly-grown succulents from my garden onto a blazing fire. All charred but didn't catch fire, nor did they transmit it. Basically, the plants cooked.
Succulents' high moisture content makes them significantly more fire-retardant than thin-leaved, woody plants.
Learn more (and see how Aloe arborescens may have "saved” a house from burning) on my site.
HOW TO START CUTTINGS
Aloe arborescens starts readily from cuttings. Slice the stem about a foot below the top of a rosette. Dig a hole big enough to hold the stem upright, insert it, and firm the soil around it. In a few weeks, roots will grow and anchor the plant.
SOIL, WATER, FERTILIZER
In a mild climate, an established colony of Aloe arborescens can get by on rainfall. However, the plants will be more lush and healthy if hosed every few weeks in summer and fall.
Aloe arborescens doesn’t require rich soil, as long as it’s well draining. Nor does it need fertilizing or irrigation. But it doesn’t mind them either, in fact, it grows more vigorously when pampered.
Aloes---most plants for that matter---need sunshine in order to bloom and photosynthesize. They tend to sulk as houseplants, flattening their leaves to expose maximum surface area to available light.
SUN AND HEAT
Along the coast, Aloe arborescens wants all-day sun; farther inland, some protection from scorching afternoon sun in summer and frosty nights below 25 degrees F in winter.
You won’t see Aloe arborescens in Arizona, except perhaps in dappled shade, because desert sun and heat are too strong for it.
VARIETIES
Alhough most often green-leaved and orange-flowered, Aloe arborescens has sub-varieties that collectors consider cool.
For example, Aloe arborescens ‘Lutea’ has yellow flowers; and leaves of Aloe arborescens ‘Variegata’ (my favorite) are striped green-and-cream.
PESTS AND PROBLEMS
The biggest concern with aloes, regardless of species or variety, is a microscopic mite that infests the tissues. It causes cancer-like growth that resembles tree burls.
Such growths have an intriguing weirdness, but please do us all a favor and remove them to keep the mite from spreading.
Remove deformed flowers as well, because mites travel on air currents. And don’t pass along cuttings of infested plants. Once an aloe has the mite, it always has it.
The only other problem I’ve encountered during decades of growing Aloe arborescens in my Zone 9b garden northeast of San Diego, was that after a particularly rainy winter, numerous leaves had dark, pitted spots.
I cut the plants back to healthy growth, discarded anything diseased, drenched stems and remaining leaves with copper fungicide, and in six months the plants grew back better than ever.
QUESTIONS?
If you have observations to share or questions to ask, kindly do so in the Comments on the Aloe arborescens page of my site, or on my corresponding YouTube video: Discover and Grow Aloe arborescens (Torch Aloe). Many thanks! Debra
About Debra Lee Baldwin
Garden photojournalist and author Debra Lee Baldwin spreads the word about “plants that drink responsibly” via books, articles, photos, videos, and social media. Her YouTube channel has more than 8,000,000 views. Debra's popular ”Celebrating the Joy of Succulents” newsletter presents design, succulent gardening essentials, and discoveries she's eager to share. She lives in San Diego’s North County, home to more succulent specialty nurseries and wholesale growers than anywhere else in the world. See Debra's own idea-filled, half-acre garden on YouTube.