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toffee_el

Jade plants for Palm Springs?

toffee-el
10 years ago

I don't find jade plants for sale in nurseries of local big box stores. So jade plants can't handle the desert?

Comments (12)

  • hoovb zone 9 sunset 23
    10 years ago

    If you are asking if big box corporations sell only plants appropriate for their local climate, the answer is no, they don't.

    If you are asking if big box corporations sell all the plants that can be grown in your local climate, the answer is the same.

  • emmarene9
    10 years ago

    Toffee I live in zone 9 also. I have a jade plant that stays outside all year.

  • merriberri
    10 years ago

    The jade plants can't handle the heat and sun. I had one planted in the valley and it just shriveled up, kinda like the wicked witch of the west when Dorothy threw water on her.

  • gobluedjm 9/18 CA
    10 years ago

    I have to disagree with merryberry. They can handle the heat and sun, but in the desert they would appreciate some shade in afternoon. The leaves will get a reddish tint when too much sun. THey do that to protect themselves from the sun. Don't leave them outside below 40 degrees on those cold winter nights. I bring mine in when it gets below 50 at night...very recently.
    MInes in a 12 inch pot and watered once a month.
    Sometimes they bloom in January, and thats when I see them more in stores. Lowes and HD both have them here in the houseplants area. The flowers are tiny and not remarkable. I pinch them off since they just create a mess.
    When I lived in Glendale I saw several in a yard of house and the trunk was at least 6 inches in diameter and about 6 x 6 feet.

  • toffee-el
    Original Author
    10 years ago

    So jade plants can't be planted in ground in Palm Springs? If the few cold nights that we have in winter don't kill them, the constant heat and dryness in the summer will?

  • socks
    10 years ago

    I've seen jades survive in some pretty torturous conditions, but not sure about in PS. Here's what the Sunset Western Garden Book says:

    "Provide overhead protection in Zones 8, 9, 12-15, 18-21." Not sure protection from what, maybe both heat and cold.

    "Landscaping shrub in mildest climates." Just my opinion, but I wouldn't call PS a mild climate.

    So, you could do an experiment and try it. Cuttings should be easy to come by. Put one in a protected area, one in an unprotected zone.

  • gobluedjm 9/18 CA
    10 years ago

    I wouldn't put them in the ground if you get 40 degrees at night during winter.
    I would keep them in pots for year or 2 with shade during your hottest hours in summer around noon-4pm.
    Perhaps put the pots in a spot where you would plant them and see what happens.
    They store water in their leaves so a good watering once a month in large pots 8" plus should be suffice. Maybe every 3 weeks july-sept. Anything smaller than that maybe every 2-3 weeks.
    My mom grew these in MI and had at least a dozen of them all in pots, outside in summer full sun and inside in winter.
    They all came from 1 branch 6 inches long here in sunny socal. She would give them away as gifts and told people to ignore them and water once a monh. I wish I had pictures, but some trunks becase 4 inches in diameter. If a branch broke off, she just stuck back in soil and it rooted.
    Since they store water in their leaves if frozen or very cold they turn to mush. I lost one a few years ago left it out when it got below 50.

    I saw small ones at nursery today.

  • bahia
    10 years ago

    Jade plants are well able to take colder than 40ðF at night, but will get damaged at 32ðF. If your garden in PS gets regular frost, plant the Jade where it has overhead protection from trees or roof overhang. In your area, it would probably do best with a north or east exposure, and wouldn't do well in full hot sun. They can be quite showy, IMO, in full winter bloom, especially on older, really large plants that can get up to 8 feet tall here in the SF Bay Area.

  • abc1971
    3 years ago

    I found this while doing a search online to find out the exact information. I have six jade plants that I put outside in the summer (I live in the Seattle area) and feel the need to water them everyday while in our intense summer sun. During the winter I bring them inside. My partner and I are thinking of moving to the Palm Springs area in about a year. I'm hoping to keep them outside all year long. I think a lot of succulents do better with no more than 6-8 hours of sun per day. Of course, some do better with more sun than that. I have so many different types and have learned that a lot of them do best with some afternoon protection from the hot sun.

  • socks
    last year

    Interesting. I thought jades could take about anything.

  • HU-457092226
    last year

    Most succulents like Jade plants can’t take the summer heat of the Coachella Valley. Bring them inside.