Aloe dorotheae

Aloe dorotheae

Aloe dorotheae

It is a very spectacularly coluoured, suckering, and low-growing aloe. Leaves are often blushed lightly with coppery glints, but can become intense bright coppery-red in very bright light.
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Description

It is a very spectacularly coluoured, suckering, and low-growing aloe. Leaves are often blushed lightly with coppery glints, but can become intense bright coppery-red in very bright light.

Family: Asphodelaceae

Scientific name:  Aloe dorotheae A.Berger
Published In: Das Pflanzenreich IV.38: 263. 1908.

Common Names include: Karoo Aloe, Ramenas, Aloe

Origin:   Eastern Africa, Tanzania (Pangani Dist.)

Etymology: Named after Miss Dorothy Westhead (fl. 1908), London

Synonyms:

  • Aloe harmsii A. Berger 1908

Aloe dorotheae (in full sun)
It is a very spectacularly coluoured, suckering, and low-growing aloe. Leaves are often blushed lightly with coppery glints, but can become intense bright coppery-red in very bright light. 

Description: Aloe dorotheae is a small, shrubby, rosettes-forming succulent, slowly offsetting it will form clumps up to 50 cm in width.
Stem: Virtually stemless or very shortly stemmed.
Leaves: In a spiralled rosette, tapering, lanceolate, recurving, that in time of drought it tends to curl in on themself. They are shiny that feel a bit like plastic, glossy green or green-yellow when young (or in shaded position), becoming orange to brown-red as the plant matures. The leaves in younger plants tend to have numerous elongated white spots scattered on the smooth surface, but these seem to fade with age. The leaf is bordered with short translucent white marginal "teeth".
Flowers: Simple spike (60 cm) with small red flowerlets , with a yellow-green trim at the outside edge.
Blooming season: Flowers come in early spring.

Leaves are deep green but   can take a dark brick-red colour in full sun especially in time of drought  during the  winter month, they are  bordered by short translucent white marginal "teeth".

Cultivation:  Easy to grow, requiring very little care. It can be grown in large containers. Always use a good quality, loamy sandy soil with plenty of drainage chips at the bottom of containers. It tolerates weekly watering in the summer; once a month, or not at all in the colder months of December and January. Can withstand long periods of drought, but they will thrive and flower more profusely if watered in the correct season. Incorrect watering, poor drainage or too much shade can lead to attack by pests and diseases. They can take a few degrees of frost in winter as well, but prefer hot summers. It grows much better outdoors in spring and summer.
In mild climates it can be cultivated outdoors for use in landscaping, preferably planting it in hot and dry rock gardens. They will grow best in regions with a climate close to that of their native deserts  not too cold, and not too wet. 

 

Propagation: Almost exclusively by seeds planted in autumn, in trays of coarse river sand.

Uses:

  • Gardening: Excellent on patio or as landscape or rock garden subject. This is a great aloe for rocky, exposed areas of the garden where you want some non-green colour.