Aloe arenicolais part of a group called Creeping Aloes . It by nature grows in almost pure sand under almost rainless conditions . During sealed times of the class , its master source of moisture comes from condensation from mist and sea fog .

Aloe arenicolaReynolds

Sand Aloe , Bont - Ot’korrie ( Afrikaans )

Aloe arenicola (Sand Aloe)

In cultivation (LHS in filtered sunlight, RHS in morning sun), Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. Photo by Santino Rischitelli. Used with permission. All rights reserved.

mob : AsphodelaceaeSubfamily : AsphodeloideaeGenus : Aloe

The specific epithet " arenicola " ( enunciate " ar - en - EE - koh - luh " ) means " sand - dwelling " and refers to the native habitat of this mintage .

Aloe arenicolais native toMadagascar . It occurs in the Northern Cape and Western Cape provinces between Alexander Bay and Lambert ’s Bay .

Aloe arenicola (Sand Aloe)

In cultivation, Wateringen, Netherlands. Photo by Cok Grootscholten. Used with permission. All rights reserved.

Aloe arenicolais a succulentshrubletwith crawl stanch that carry blue - green leaves beautify with on an irregular basis scattered white spots on both surfaces . The base can be either simple or branched , growing up to 3.3 feet ( 1 m ) long and 0.15 inch ( 0.4 cm ) in diameter . They may also have relentless dry leave . The lance - shaped folio have off-white margins with tiny tooth and can measure up to 8 inch ( 20 cm ) long and 2.4 inches ( 6 cm ) wide . Under tenseness , the leaves may take on a dark-brown - scarlet hue .

From mid - wintertime to early summertime , Aloe arenicolaproduces peach - red bloom that are paler toward the mouthpiece . The flowers appear thickly packed ininflorescences , which can be unsubdivided or may have one or occasionally two branch that emerge from the eye . The anthesis can rise up to 20 inches ( 50 cm ) improbable , while the flower clusters can reach a length of about 2.4 column inch ( 6 cm ) and a diameter of 3.6 inches ( 9 centimetre ) .

Light : When growingAloe arenicolaindoors , place it in a windowpane with plentifulness of bright collateral light . Rotate the gage once or twice a calendar week to insure all sides of the industrial plant receive equal lighting . Outdoors , the flora prefers light shade , especially during the hottest parts of the daytime .

Aloe arenicola (Sand Aloe)

In cultivation, San Francisco, California, United States. Photo by Kevin Roth. Used with permission. All rights reserved.

stain : smashing drainage is essential for produce this plant because too much wet for an extended menstruum can cause root rot . Use commercial soil for succulent , ormake your own well - drain mix .

Temperature : When temperatures shift below 50 ° F ( 10 ° C ) , it is clock time to bring this flora inside . It tolerate heat pretty well but will not live on a voiceless hoarfrost . Aloe arenicolagrows good inUSDA Plant Hardiness Zones9b to 11b , with modal minimal winter temperatures ranging from 25 to 50 ° F ( -3.9 to 10 ° hundred ) .

Watering : This plant needs regular watering but can stomach drouth conditions for shortsighted periods . Water deep , but only when the dirt is all ironical to the touch , and do not let urine put up in the rosettes . shorten back onwateringduring the wintertime month .

Aloe arenicola (Sand Aloe)

In habitat, Hondeklip Bay road dunes, Northern Cape, South Africa. Derivative of a photo byTony Rebelo. Licensed underCC BY-SA 4.0.

Fertilizing : Although it generally does not ask fertilizer , Aloe arenicolawill benefit from extra nutrients . habituate a body of water - soluble fertilizer adulterate to half the recommended strength .

Repotting : Repot only as needed during leap . Pick a container that is one size great and has drainage hole .

Propagation : To propagateAloe arenicola , remove the offsets from a ripe   plant   from previous spring to other summer . It is also easy to set off from seed . For good results , seed the seeds during the strong months .

Learn more atHow to Grow and handle for Aloe .

Aloe arenicolais non - toxic to people but is mild to moderately toxic to positron emission tomography .

tap a photo to see a larger reading .

Did you find this helpful ? divvy up it with other succulent lovers !