
RUSSELL NURSERY
CONTAINER GARDENING WITH SUCCULENTS

SOIL RECIPE FOR SUCCULENT CONTAINERS
4 parts sterilized potting soil (not peat-based soilless blend)
1 part coarse sand (available at Trio, Gravel Mart, Peninsula Landscape Supply, etc)
1 part Vermiculite (available in small bags at the nursery.![]()

SEMPERVIVUMS
These are the familiar, rosette forming “hens and chicks”, very easy to propagate using the chicks as starts for new plants. Just a few of the many varieties available:
Sempervivum arachnoideum; with a spidery web covering the rosette,
S. calcareum; green with red tips ‘Sir William Lawrence’ especially attractive,
S. marmoreum; rich, mahogany red leaves,
S. atroviolaceum; muted colour with soft metallic sheen.

These are usually more mat-like, excellent ground covers for containers and small garden areas, and easy to propagate using stem cuttings.
Sedum pachyclados; heavily toothed, closely packed rosettes on wandering green stems,
S. spathulifolium ‘Cape Blanco’; grey to almost white carpet of textured small rosettes.
S. makinoi ‘Ogon’; yellow foliage, tiny leaves but very easy to grow, forming a lovely cascading ground cover, very pretty in a blue pot. It tolerates shade well.
S. repestre ‘Angelina’ is a striking, lime green mass of shaggy foliage. It tends to be a bit robust in a pot, but is easy to cut back, and make new plants from the cuttings.
S. rubrotinctum; the “jelly bean” plant, one of the many good Stonecrop Sedums
SEDUMS FOR SHADE
Sedum sieboldii ‘Mediovariegatum’; variegated leaves on stems up to 14”,
S. spurium ‘John Creech’; very tough, can even take dry shade under a conifer tree.
NON HARDY SUCCULENTS (available mid spring, throughout summer)
The Echeverias that grow here are usually pale blue/green rosettes, but sometimes we see the ruffled, larger leafed varieties, which are even more tender than the rosettes. I have sometimes kept rosette-type Echeverias outside during the winter, as long as they are very dry, and protected from the elements; usually tucked up against the warm house in a sheltered spot. For best results, a cool greenhouse, bright shed or garage is the safest place, as long as they are kept above freezing. Light is important.
FURTHER READING
Designing with Succulents – Debra Lee Baldwin
Hardy Succulents – Gwen Moore Kelaidis
The Jewel Box Garden – Thomas Hobbs
