Yucca whipplei

Submitted by Tim Ingram on

Following Rick's suggestion I'm putting a series of photos of Yucca whipplei as it throws up a flower spike in our garden. The plant is relatively young, only 7 or 8 years from seed, and I hadn't expected any flowering for quite some time yet. Unfortunately it is one of the forms that doesn't produce offsets so this flowering will be a glorious finale! So here it is on 22/4, 25/4 and 28/4... how high will it get?!

Comments


Submitted by Hoy on Sat, 04/28/2012 - 14:59

Tim wrote:

Following Rick's suggestion I'm putting a series of photos of Yucca whipplei as it throws up a flower spike in our garden. The plant is relatively young, only 7 or 8 years from seed, and I hadn't expected any flowering for quite some time yet. Unfortunately it is one of the forms that doesn't produce offsets so this flowering will be a glorious finale! So here it is on 22/4, 25/4 and 28/4... how high will it get?!

Hope you get a  huge batch of seed! Or is it self incompatible?


Submitted by DesertZone on Sat, 04/28/2012 - 16:49

Tim wrote:

Following Rick's suggestion I'm putting a series of photos of Yucca whipplei as it throws up a flower spike in our garden. The plant is relatively young, only 7 or 8 years from seed, and I hadn't expected any flowering for quite some time yet. Unfortunately it is one of the forms that doesn't produce offsets so this flowering will be a glorious finale! So here it is on 22/4, 25/4 and 28/4... how high will it get?!

WOW...your garden is amazing. :)


Submitted by RickR on Sat, 04/28/2012 - 23:12

Wow!  :o  I hadn't realized the girth of that stalk before! 

It's going to be gigantic!


Submitted by Cockcroft on Sun, 04/29/2012 - 12:03

Here are a couple of pictures from my sister's acreage in San Diego, California.  A gorgeous plant -- and yes, I collected a lot of seed and sprouted a whole pot of seedlings, most of which I gave to Rick Lupp.   :)


Submitted by RickR on Sun, 04/29/2012 - 18:43

The color is gorgeous, Claire!  Wow!


Submitted by Hoy on Mon, 04/30/2012 - 02:53

RickR wrote:

The color is gorgeous, Claire!  Wow!

Just the colour? I think the whole plant is marvellous!


Submitted by Weiser on Mon, 04/30/2012 - 09:19

Tim wrote:

So here it is on 22/4, 25/4 and 28/4... how high will it get?!

I've had various yucca species send boom stalks twelve foot tall. (3.5meters)

Tim wrote:

Unfortunately it is one of the forms that doesn't produce offsets so this flowering will be a glorious finale!

I don't have die back after blooming of my yuccas. You may find that they will add new side shoots however.

Hoy wrote:

Hope you get a  huge batch of seed! Or is it self incompatible?

Likely hood of getting viable seed is almost impossible without hand pollination. It's not so much a question of being self incompatible as being pollinator specific. Yuccas in nature are pollinated by very specific moth species. This is a very interesting co-evaluation and co-dependance. here are a couple of articles for those who want to know more.

http://waynesword.palomar.edu/ww0902a.htm
http://www.emporia.edu/ksn/v41n2-june1995/introduction.htm


Submitted by Tim Ingram on Mon, 04/30/2012 - 15:21

Claire - I didn't realise that the flowers could be so strongly coloured! It increases my anticipation of the flowering even more. Graham Stuart Thomas in his classic book 'Perennial Garden Plants' described Yucca whipplei as 'One of the most wonderful plants in the world' and that picture really shows why - it must be amazing to see in the wild.

I may have a go at hand pollinating if I have a tall enough stepladder!


Submitted by Mark McD on Mon, 04/30/2012 - 21:06

Cockcroft wrote:

Here are a couple of pictures from my sister's acreage in San Diego, California.  A gorgeous plant -- and yes, I collected a lot of seed and sprouted a whole pot of seedlings, most of which I gave to Rick Lupp.   :)

Yowsa, simply fantastic :o :o :o


Submitted by Tim Ingram on Thu, 05/03/2012 - 14:31

A quick update on Yucca whipplei as of today. The flowering spike is now showing signs of the floral structure to come. Will it show any colour in the flowers? I wait with bated breath.


Submitted by Mark McD on Thu, 05/03/2012 - 21:12

Ever more impressive Tim!  Amazing how much it has grown in 5 days since your last photo.  Fun to also watch the flowering plants in the background, the blue Polygala patch is looking as bright as ever.

Hmmm, I think that I saw you identify the blue patch as a Polygala on SRGC?


Submitted by Weiser on Fri, 05/04/2012 - 06:31

Tim wrote:

I wait with bated breath.

As do we all!!!


Submitted by Hoy on Fri, 05/04/2012 - 10:58

Tim wrote:

A quick update on Yucca whipplei as of today. The flowering spike is now showing signs of the floral structure to come. Will it show any colour in the flowers? I wait with bated breath.

Tim, I bet you are! BTW for how long can you do that?

I hope you don't get the weather we have now - storm from north >:(  Some tall plants are broken, leaves and flowers are damaged in the strong wind.


Submitted by Weiser on Wed, 05/16/2012 - 13:00

Tim!!! :-X  I'm dieing here I can't hold my breath much longer. Let us see the blossoms!


Submitted by DesertZone on Mon, 05/21/2012 - 17:56

Any pics of ther blooms? :)


Submitted by Tim Ingram on Tue, 05/29/2012 - 01:44

Sorry all - I've been a bit overwhelmed taking pictures of the yucca every day that I haven't posted any to show how it's doing! This from a few days ago as the flowers are really beginning to open. In another week or ten days it should look really magnificent. I have a second plant in the sand bed behind it which is not flowering, but which actually has a much bigger rosette. If and when that flowers it should be even more amazing. This is obviously a plant you need to plant every year if you have space, to keep more regular flowering year by year. Are there any other yuccas at all comparable with this? It is more reminiscent of agaves and dasylirions.


Submitted by Weiser on Tue, 05/29/2012 - 06:52

Impressive!!

The flowering stem is very stout. It looks a lot thicker than I see on my Y. elata.

Well done! 


Submitted by Hoy on Tue, 05/29/2012 - 15:29

Tim, i think you have to use a ladder to admire the flowers! and the stem should support it ;)


Submitted by Tim Ingram on Wed, 05/30/2012 - 01:46

I'm afraid I might fall off onto the rosette of leaves Trond! This picture was taken a day or twoo later with the lovely Lithodora x intermedia in the foreground. Behind the yucca is something even taller, a glaucous leaved form of Ferula communis, still a little off flowering. After particularly mild winters in the past we used to also have giant echiums (pininiana) flowering with the fennel - a sort of Brobdingnagian front garden!


Submitted by RickR on Wed, 05/30/2012 - 06:56

Such an extraordinary specimen, that yucca! 

I had to look up that Echium pininiana...
What happens in a not so mild winter for you?  And does it ever die back completely to the ground?


Submitted by Mark McD on Wed, 05/30/2012 - 22:01

Tim, your garden is sheer spectacle! Inspiring to see such fantastic plantings.


Submitted by Tim Ingram on Thu, 05/31/2012 - 11:49

Thanks Mark, it's very nice of you to say so! I think few gardeners have such a passion for plants which is why it is so great to meet up with gardeners in the States. Our aim has always been to grow a very wide range of species, rarely seen in gardens (usually from wild collected seed), and then propagate these and make them available to visitors. I hope the day of the specialist nursery will return because it makes for far more interesting and diverse gardens.


Submitted by Tim Ingram on Mon, 06/11/2012 - 01:32

A final update on Yucca whipplei - summer storms and rain have rather lashed the plant but these are a few pictures showing the development of the flowering panicle again and close ups of a flower raceme and of an individual flower. What a plant to grow in your garden!


Submitted by RickR on Mon, 06/11/2012 - 08:15

Weather can sure prevent those prize photos that you would cherish forever, can't it...
But the ones you show here are superb!

Very curious how fat the filaments, especially below the anthers.  Any story about that?  Is this normal for the whole genus?


Submitted by Weiser on Mon, 06/11/2012 - 11:00

Rick
The fat filaments come standard in this genus. What I find kind of unique is the lacy crown of filaments around the edge of the stigma tip.

Here are close ups of some of the yuccas I grow.

Yucca angustissima ssp. kanabensis

Yucca elata

Yucca harrimaniae var. gilbertiana  

Yucca glauca ssp. glauca


Submitted by Tim Ingram on Mon, 06/11/2012 - 13:56

John - very nice to see those comparisons. Do you know how common it is amongst yuccas to have strongly coloured flowers? There was that amazing example earlier on of Y. whipplei, and I know of Y. glauca from Claude Barr's book. I was also quite struck by the strong scent (of lemons) of the flowers - maybe more pronounced in the evening? I have a plant of Y. thompsoniana just producing a flower spike and will look at this more closely than I have before.


Submitted by Hoy on Mon, 06/11/2012 - 14:11

The Yuccas are beautiful! Both the plant and the flowers ;D


Submitted by Weiser on Mon, 06/11/2012 - 15:20

I do not think it is very common to have strongly colored flowers on mature blossoms. My Yucca angustissima ssp. kanabensis and one of my Yucca glauca ssp. glauca have rose/purple flushes to the outside surface of the flowers when they first start to develop. But it quickly fades to cream as they gain size. The Y. elata does have deep brown stems on the inflorescence a nice contrast to the creamy white flowers.

I have never detected any fragrance to the blossoms of my Yuccas. That is interesting!

Below you may be able to discern the brown stems of the Yucca eleta that is if you can see between the flowers. The second photo is a closeup of the flowers and stem before they were fully open.
 


Submitted by DesertZone on Tue, 06/12/2012 - 17:23

Love the yucca flower line up.  Nice pic everyone. :)


Submitted by Hoy on Wed, 06/13/2012 - 02:13

If I didn't already know that I wish I could grow Yuccas, I would know now for sure ;D


Submitted by Tim Ingram on Sat, 07/14/2012 - 01:57

There is a saying that you wait for ages for a bus to come along, and then two come at the same time! After the first plant of Yucca whipplei flowered in our garden I am quite dismayed that the second is also doing so - it will be a long wait to sow seed and wait for another flowering! The picture shows it with Dierama pulcherrima in the foreground. Behind it is a very perennial, and perennially flowering, Yucca thompsoniana, closely related to Y. rostrata. This was also grown from seed and is getting better year on year, although mature plants of rostrata (presumably wild dug) are occasionally seen in gardens here.


Submitted by DesertZone on Sat, 07/14/2012 - 07:51

That is so cool.  Love the pic with both flowers.

What palm sp. is that?


Submitted by Tim Ingram on Sat, 07/14/2012 - 10:31

The palm is Butia capitata - it didn't much like last winter's low of -14°C but seems to be growing out again OK. I've tried a few others like Washingtonia and the beautiful Brahea armata with no luck outside.


Submitted by DesertZone on Sat, 07/14/2012 - 22:06

So glad it made it through that kind of cold.  Looks a little different than the one I seen over here.  Nice looking palm, and great looking yuccas. :)


Submitted by Tim Ingram on Tue, 07/17/2012 - 13:31

It's quite difficult to deal with Yucca whipplei after it has flowered! I decided to cut all the leaves back to the centre and then thought this made rather a good piece of Garden Sculpture, as well as reminding me of the amazing flower spike earlier on. I don't know how long this will last; will be interesting to see!


Submitted by Mark McD on Thu, 07/19/2012 - 21:06

Tim wrote:

It's quite difficult to deal with Yucca whipplei after it has flowered! I decided to cut all the leaves back to the centre and then thought this made rather a good piece of Garden Sculpture, as well as reminding me of the amazing flower spike earlier on. I don't know how long this will last; will be interesting to see!

Tim, it is hard to imagine how you cut all those leaves back so neatly, and secondly, how did you even begin the process of cutting the first leaves with its formidable defensive periphery of dagger-sharp leaves. ;)


Submitted by Merlin on Thu, 07/19/2012 - 22:44

Tim wrote:

It's quite difficult to deal with Yucca whipplei after it has flowered! I decided to cut all the leaves back to the centre and then thought this made rather a good piece of Garden Sculpture, as well as reminding me of the amazing flower spike earlier on. I don't know how long this will last; will be interesting to see!

That is pretty cool! I can say I would never thought of doing that,  if i'm still alive and if my Yucca harrimaniae ever blooms perhaps i will give that a try. 


Submitted by Barstow on Sat, 08/11/2012 - 04:49

There's a good article with Tim Ingram and his Yuccas in the August issue of RHS The Garden magazine!


Submitted by Martin Tversted on Wed, 10/03/2012 - 07:40

Tim, did you take seeds, many forms dont form offsets and just die. Often the whipplei group is placed in their own genus Hesperoyucca. They cannot be crossed with yuccas though all other yuccas can interbreed.

Martin


Submitted by Cockcroft on Wed, 03/06/2013 - 13:21

I visited my sister near San Diego, California and took a picture of yet another Yucca whipplei -- this one looks like it might bloom this year.  As you might recall, the flowers on this form are white and dark maroon.  Should it bloom, I will be sure to get seeds to share before the yucca moth can ruin them all.