Press-Telegram (Long Beach)

Succulents solve many hang-ups of baskets

- Share your experience growing plants in hanging baskets by sending an email to joshua@perfectpla­nts.com. Questions and comments regarding any plant species or gardening practice or problem are always welcome as well as your photos.

Hanging baskets. Mention hanging baskets to a veteran gardener and you are likely to get an eye roll in response. “They're just not worth the trouble,” you might hear. “They dry out so quickly that watering even once a day may not even be enough.”

Of course, it is always possible to set up an automated drip system through the rafters so water is delivered to the baskets hanging from them as often as you wish. Yet if you are not inclined to bring drip irrigation to your hanging baskets, but you still aspire to grow plants in this manner, there is a solution: Select succulents for your baskets. And in order to better appreciate your selections, make them succulents that spill over the side of their basket and grow down vertically as much as several feet or more

The first plant I think of regarding this subject is string-of-pearls (Senecio/Curio rowleyanus), also known as string-of-beads. In fact, it's the plant that inspired this column. I was entrusted with revitalizi­ng someone's string-of-pearls that had gone several months without water. Normally, the unusual leaves, which are perfect spheres around one-quarter inch in diameter, are a shiny, bright green. However, the leaves/pearls of the plant I received had turned blue. This color change is a physiologi­cal response among succulent plants. When a succulent is stressed — whether from intense light, heat or drought — it produces anthocyani­n, a pigment that turns leaves blue or purple. Or it may produce carotenoid, a pigment that turns leaves yellow, orange or red. These colors offer protection from the sun's ultraviole­t rays. Sometimes, due to color change, a succulent's appearance can actually be enhanced when it is stressed. Incidental­ly, two days after soaking the drought-stressed stringof-pearls, its leaf color had returned to green.

String-of-pearls is native to southweste­rn Africa, where it grows as a ground cover that is partial to shady locations. Given half-day sun in a hanging basket, it only needs to be watered once a month. Flowers bloom for four weeks during the summer, smell like cinnamon and resemble miniature daisies. This is not an accident, since string-of-pearls is a daisy family member. Its spherical leaves bolster its drought tolerance since there is minimum surface area exposed to the sun in relation to leaf volume. A variegated cultivar has green and cream pearls which, when given a few hours of intense daily sun, show off streaks of pink as well.

Like their string-of-pearls cousin, two cultivars of Senecio radicans produce distinctiv­e chains of leaves that will eventually dangle 3 feet down from the hanging basket in which they grow. The Fish Hooks cultivar does indeed show off leaves that are unmistakab­le doppelgang­ers for the angular metal hooks used to nab fish. Stringof-bananas has plump, 1-inch, bananashap­ed leaves.

String-of-dolphins (Senecio peregrinus) is really something special, as its leaves look just like miniature dolphins. Trailing or weeping jade (Senecio jacobsenii) has small, paddleshap­ed leaves studded tightly along pendulous stems; the leaves take on a violet to magenta hue when exposed to bright, if indirect, light. You can procure this extremely drought-tolerant species by mail order from anniesannu­als.com.

String-of-buttons (Crassula perforata) has symmetrica­l, circular leaves that are tightly stacked on the stem so as to resemble the beads on an abacus; other string-of-buttons cultivars have triangular to squarish leaves.

One of the most well-known hanging succulents is donkey tail (Sedum morganianu­m). Due to its slow growth, gemlike leaves and minimal maintenanc­e, it is a treasure that is often passed down from one generation to the next. Monkey tail (Hildewinte­ra Colademono­nis) is a cactus whose hairy appendages can extend as far as 8 feet in length and really do look and feel like a primate's tail. Its flowers have the panache of cactus flowers generally and, in this case, they are a luminescen­t orange.

Other hanging cactuses worth mentioning include rat tail cactus (Aporocactu­s flagellifo­rmis), whose stems may hang down as far as 6 feet and are decorated with orange, red or pink blooms. It is widely considered to be the easiest hanging cactus to grow. The stems of peanut cactus (Echinopsis chamaecere­us) do look like peanuts for some time until they eventually elongate and hang down. And let's not forget orchid cactus (Epiphyllum species), with those flat leaves that extend, over time, to 10 feet and whose flowers in every color except blue open up to 10 inches across.

While not strictly succulent, two highly popular, drought-tolerant hanging plants are chain of hearts (Ceropegia woodii) and wax plant (Hoya carnosa). Chain of hearts has pendulous stems that can grow to 13 feet, heartshape­d foliage that is variegated in some cultivars, and intriguing tubular blooms. Wax plant is so named due to its flowers' appearance and texture. Unexpected­ly, the scent that wafts from these flowers is among the sweetest in the entire plant kingdom. There are multiple Hoya species and cultivars, including dwarf types, that any plant lover would benefit from growing.

Shop for drought-tolerant succulents in hanging baskets at California Nursery Specialtie­s in Reseda (california-cactus-succulents.com), California Cactus Center in Pasadena (california­cactuscent­er.com) and California Greenhouse­s in Irvine (ocsucculen­ts. com).

If you wish to grow plants of any kind in a hanging basket, you will find wire baskets and green sphagnum moss at most nurseries and home improvemen­t centers; simply line the baskets with the moss and fill with the appropriat­e soil mix. You can also find wire baskets with fiber shells already in place so all you have to do is add soil and plants. Keep in mind that a cactus mix is recommende­d for growing succulents and cactuses of every descriptio­n.

String-of-buttons

 ?? PHOTOS BY JOSHUA SISKIN ?? Hardy succulents like string-of-pearls have less chance of drying out in hanging baskets.
PHOTOS BY JOSHUA SISKIN Hardy succulents like string-of-pearls have less chance of drying out in hanging baskets.
 ?? ?? Variegated string-of-pearls
Variegated string-of-pearls
 ?? ?? Donkey tail
Donkey tail
 ?? ?? Chain of hearts
Chain of hearts
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