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Puya alpestris

Puya alpestris
Mountain Puya

5,0/5
2 reviews
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Still me a few months later: big surprise, the puya has flowered (impossible to send you photos - error message) but obviously, after researching on the internet, it is a puya densiflora: long, curved, slender stem with green flowers instead of blue, arranged on the stem a bit like tuberoses. Still pretty, but I would have preferred to be able to admire these strange flower spikes that we can see in your photo.

Sylviane, 17/08/2022

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This plant carries a 12 months recovery warranty

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Value-for-money
A rather spectacular Chilean perennial. This plant forms a rosette of strongly toothed leaves, from which emerges—after a few years—a massive flower stalk measuring 1.20m (4ft) in height, adorned with tubular flowers of a dark green-blue turquoise colour with bright orange stamens. Plant this puya in a regular but very well-drained soil, moist to dry in summer. In a pot, reduce watering in winter. Outside of mild regions, it will be necessary to cultivate it in large pots to overwinter. Hardiness: -6°C (21.2°F).
Flower size
4 cm
Height at maturity
1.10 m
Spread at maturity
80 cm
Exposure
Sun, Partial shade
Hardiness
Hardy down to -6°C
Soil moisture
Dry soil, Moist soil
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Best planting time April
Recommended planting time April to May
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Flowering time May to June
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Description

The Puya alpestris, sometimes known as the Sapphire Tower, is a perennial native to the Chilean Andes that will delight botanical enthusiasts. Less well-known than its parent, the yellow-flowered Puya chilensis, it is also less impressive than its cousin, the Puya berteroniana, but it flowers at a younger age and in an equally unreal range of colours. This Chilean cousin of pineapples first forms a rosette of long, slender, toothed leaves, green-gray in colour, and then a highly original branched floral spike adorned with dark green-blue flowers with metallic reflections and punctuated with orange stamens. They are filled with nectar that Chilean birds love. This flowering often marks the death of the rosette that bears it, but the plant ensures its survival through daughter rosettes and spontaneous seedlings that germinate under favourable conditions. Still rare, this puya is increasingly attracting exotic plant enthusiasts who care for it in pots and is starting to appear in our gardens in mild climates.

The Puya alpestris is a succulent perennial plant belonging to the bromeliad family. It is native to the foothills of the Andes, at the latitude of Santiago de Chile, within a vegetation cover reminiscent of our scrubland and maquis. It can be found anchored in rocky cliffs or somewhat arid heathlands, on poor, leached soils, often basaltic, dry in winter and summer. This high-altitude botanical species tolerates short frosts of around -6°C (21.2°F) in very well-drained soil. It is cultivated somewhat like a cactus and its foliage persists throughout the year.

The plant grows quite slowly, forming a rosette of basal leaves that spread in width by producing shoots late in its life. The leaves, which can measure up to 70 cm (28in) in length, form a fountain-like clump that eventually reaches 80 cm (32in) to 1 m (3ft) in all directions. They are curved towards the ground, very narrow, leathery, pointed, covered with a waxy film, and lined with fine, hook-shaped, formidable teeth. Their colour, greener in winter, takes on silvery reflections in summer due to heat and drought. Flowering usually takes place in late spring in our latitudes, in May-June. From the centre of the mature rosette, a 1 m (3ft) or 1.20 m (4ft) tall almond green floral spike covered with flower buds emerges. The first flowers open on the main stem, which then branches into sterile secondary stems on which birds perch. The flowers, with their three fleshy, shiny petals, green-blue turquoise with an iris-like appearance, form deep cups. They are numerous and densely packed together. Each flower measures 3 to 4 cm (1 to 2in) in diameter and has three stamens covered in orange pollen. They are filled with a syrupy blue nectar that birds and large pollinating insects relish. The Puya alpestris most often survises through the development of daughter rosettes that emerge near the stump before flowering.

This Puya alpestris is a collectible plant that deserves a prominent place in our gardens in mild climates. It can be placed in a large exotic rockery, for example alongside Yucca, Dasylirions, or modest palm trees, Phormium, or hardy tall candle cacti such as Echinopsis, Cereus strausii, or aethiops. This plant can be easily cultivated on a terrace, in a cactus soil mix, where it will thrive in a large pot. As soon as the first cold weather arrives, you should store it, handling it with care as this puya is very "clingy," in a greenhouse or conservatory. Undoubtedly one of the most unique Puya species, it is definitely worth trying to cultivate it in the ground in our mild regions.

Puya alpestris in pictures

Puya alpestris (Flowering) Flowering
Puya alpestris (Foliage) Foliage
Puya alpestris (Plant habit) Plant habit

Flowering

Flower colour blue
Flowering time May to June
Inflorescence Spike
Flower size 4 cm
Flowering description Flowers very rich in nectar, pollinated by birds.

Foliage

Foliage persistence Evergreen
Foliage colour green

Plant habit

Height at maturity 1.10 m
Spread at maturity 80 cm
Growth rate slow

Botanical data

Genus

Puya

Species

alpestris

Family

Bromeliaceae

Other common names

Mountain Puya

Origin

South America

Product reference8993111

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Planting and care

The Puya alpestris is preferably planted in spring. Choose a sunny or partially shaded location in the afternoon in very hot regions. Install it in a perfectly drained soil, enriched with pumice, potting soil and gravel. It will be hardy up to -7/-8°C (19.4/17.6°F) if the soil is almost dry in winter. In summer, it fears the combination of heat and excessive soil moisture which causes its roots to rot. Once established, this Puya generally does not require watering in summer. In our very dry regions, occasional watering will be welcome, as well as a foliage shower at the end of a hot day. It is quite accommodating with regard to the soil pH, which can be acidic, neutral or slightly alkaline.

Pot cultivation: prepare a large container with a perforated bottom that you will fill with a mixture of potting soil, sand and pumice. Water regularly, without exaggeration. Add a little cactus or succulent fertiliser to the watering water in spring.

16
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Planting period

Best planting time April
Recommended planting time April to May

Intended location

Suitable for Meadow, Rockery
Type of use Border, Free-standing, Container, Slope, Greenhouse, Conservatory
Hardiness Hardy down to -6°C (USDA zone 9a) Show map
Ease of cultivation Amateur
Planting density 5 per m2
Exposure Sun, Partial shade
Soil pH Any
Soil type Stony (poor and well-drained)
Soil moisture Dry soil, Moist soil, Fertile, well-drained

Care

Pruning No pruning necessary
Disease resistance Good
Overwinter Needs to be stored
5/5
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