Common names: Plant Habit or Use: Exposure: Flower Color: Blooming Period: Fruit Characteristics: Height: Width: Plant Character: Heat Tolerance: Water Requirements: Soil Requirements: USDA Hardiness Zone: |
Yucca small/medium shrub sun pinkish red, coral, yellow spring summer woody capsule 3 to 5 feet 2 to 4 feet evergreen very high low adaptable 7 |
Red yucca (which is not a yucca) is a stalwart in the landscapes of Texas and the southwest. Its dark green rosette of long, thin leaves rising fountain-like from the base provides an unusual sculptural accent, its long spikes of pink to red to coral bell-shaped flowers last from May through October, and it is exceedingly tough, tolerating extreme heat and cold and needing no attention or supplemental irrigation once established, although many people remove the dried flower stalks in the fall. Unlike yucca, the leaves are not spine-tipped, and have fibrous threads along the edges. Red yucca is native to Central and Western Texas. A yellow-flowered form has recently become available in nurseries, and a larger, white-flowered species native to Mexico, giant hesperaloe (H. funifera), which has only been found in one location in the Trans-Pecos, is also available. Hummingbirds are attracted to the flowers. |
Information on this page is from Missouri Botanical Gardens. or Dave’s Garden |