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Puya weberbaueri

Puya weberbaueri
Puya

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This leafy and evergreen perennial succulent young plant forms a beautiful rosette of long leafs, green-grey in colour, curved and bordered with spines. After a few years, it produces a stout and ramified flower stalk, where numerous tubular flowers in a whitish colour are tightly packed. The Puya werberbaueri is a medium-sized species, very rare in cultivation, reserved for enthusiasts. It is preferable to grow it in a pot, which allows sheltering it in winter. Place it in a sunny or partially shaded spot, in a very well-drained soil.
Flower size
10 cm
Height at maturity
80 cm
Spread at maturity
80 cm
Exposure
Sun, Partial shade
Hardiness
Hardy down to -4°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 weberbaueri (synonym Puya textoragicolae) is a medium-sized species, very rare in cultivation, native to southern Peru and northern Bolivia, where it grows at an altitude between 2500 and 3800 meters (8202 and 12467 feet). It belongs to a group of fairly spectacular succulent perennial plants, related to pineapples, but hardier, more undemanding and more cold-resistant. Until now, these strange queens of the Andes have been almost impossible to find in Europe, but they are slowly making their way into the collections of exotic plant enthusiasts who also know how to be patient. This one forms a rosette of long, arched, gray-green leaves bordered with spines, and produces a stout and branching flower spike, loaded with almost white tubular flowers. A beautiful collector's plant!

 

The Puya textoragicolae belongs to the bromeliad family. Native to the Bolivian and Peruvian Andes, this species can withstand short freezes of around -6°C in a very well-drained soil, possibly even more, but the rarity of this puya in cultivation does not allow for more precise indications at this time. Its water needs are moderate and it has excellent wind resistance.

This puya shows fairly slow growth, forming fairly dense rosettes of leaves that can reach a height and spread of 80 cm (32in). The plant spreads over time to form large clumps composed of a few rosettes. The leaves are wide at the base, very long, tapering to a point, leathery, grayish green in colour, erect towards the center but trailing towards the periphery. They are edged with numerous fierce spines that curve inward towards the plant. Mature rosettes, several years old, flower in spring, from May to June. From their center emerges a flower spike that resembles an asparagus and can rise up to 1.50 m (5ft) above the ground. It bears branches filled with numerous tubular flowers, flared, about 10 cm (4in) long, slightly drooping towards the ground. Each flower is composed of 3 white petals and 3 grayish sepals. These flowers are well adapted to the beaks of nectar-feeding birds from their native Andes, which come to drink nectar while ensuring their pollination. Flowering marks the death of the rosette, but the plant ensures its perpetuation by producing daughter rosettes near its base.

 

In a mild climate garden, Puya weberbaueri finds its place among Agaves, Dasylirions, Nolinas, and other Aloes, in a well-drained soil exposed to full sun. Do not place this spiny plant near a pathway and keep it away from young children. It is easily grown in containers, using a cactus-type soil mix. As soon as the first cold weather arrives, you should protect it from humidity and cold, handling it with caution due to its spines, in a temperate greenhouse or an unheated conservatory.

The Puya is called "sheep-eating plant" by English speakers. Indeed, its spiny vegetation allows it to defend itself against the teeth of herbivores in the arid heathlands where few plants manage to survive. Imagine a sheep with its wool getting too close to the puya; it would risk getting trapped until its death and serve as food for the plant.

Puya weberbaueri in pictures

Puya weberbaueri (Flowering) Flowering
Puya weberbaueri (Foliage) Foliage
Puya weberbaueri (Plant habit) Plant habit

Flowering

Flower colour white
Flowering time May to June
Inflorescence Spike
Flower size 10 cm

Foliage

Foliage persistence Evergreen
Foliage colour green

Plant habit

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

Botanical data

Genus

Puya

Species

weberbaueri

Family

Bromeliaceae

Other common names

Puya

Origin

South America

Product reference899391

Planting and care

The Puya weberbaueri is preferably planted in spring. In open ground, in a very mild climate, choose a sunny or rather semi-shaded location in the south. Install it in a perfectly drained soil, enriched with compost, pumice, sand, and gravel, in a rockery or on a slope sheltered from cold winds. It will be hardy up to -5°C (23°F) or even more if the soil is almost dry in winter. To protect it from rain, you can place a thick mulch at its base and a plastic sheet on the rosette. In summer, it fears the combination of heat and excessive soil humidity that causes its roots to rot. Once established, this Puya generally doesn't require watering in summer. However, in our very dry and very hot regions, regular watering will be welcome, as well as a foliage shower at the end of a scorching day.

Container cultivation: prepare a large container with a perforated bottom equipped with a drainage layer (clay balls, gravel), which you will fill with a mixture of compost, sand, and pumice. Water regularly, but without excess. Add a little cactus or succulent fertilizer to the watering water in spring. Shelter your pot in a frost-free greenhouse, but not too hot (between 5 and 10°C (41 and 50°F)). Reduce watering in winter, without allowing the substrate to completely dry out.

16
€14.50 Each
6
€19.50

Planting period

Best planting time April
Recommended planting time April to May

Intended location

Suitable for Rockery
Type of use Border, Free-standing, Container, Slope, Greenhouse, Conservatory
Hardiness Hardy down to -4°C (USDA zone 9b) Show map
Ease of cultivation Experienced
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, Very well drained

Care

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

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