Yes, some are pale green and a bit of yellowish and this is not due to any sort of weak nutrition or any sunnier position or any dryer condition. They are so! These individuals have this tendency.
Look here, of course the landscape is dazzling fabulous but notice the way these clumps are spectacular.
Dyckia brevifolia is a tremendously beautiful and aesthetic plant.
It forms hemispheres, half balls so beautiful one must see to believe his eyes.
Here I do not mean the place where they grow and call home, I mean not the bare rock, the water proximity, I mean the plant itself and the way it clumps.
Where are the silver white ones, the huge spines, the red ones, the heavily frosted ones, those we are used to call as outrageous beautiful?
Look at those plants here.
Would the most expensive, exclusive and sophisticated pot do any better than this?




