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Crassula ovata – Tough as Jade

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Crassula argentea ET's Finger
Photo Credit: Gerald Klingaman
This jade plant clone, called ET’s Finger, was grown from eight cuttings stuck into a 6-inch bulb pot.
The jade plant (Crassula ovata formerly known as Crassula argentea) is a favorite houseplant responsible for introducing many kids to the joys of gardening, thanks to its indestructible ways. It’s a succulent belonging to the Crassulaceae family, where sedums, hens and chicks, and many kinds of fleshy-leafed plants reside.

In its native habitat, jade plant grows to 10 feet tall with leglike branches and torso-sized trunks. As a houseplant, it can be kept much smaller for several years in a tiny pot. Its succulent, jade-green leaves are 2 inches long, oval in outline and ¼ of an inch thick. Several clones have been selected, including one with a tubular leaf called “ET’s Finger” (‘Gollum’).

In Southern California, this houseplant is sometimes used as a hedge and flowers in midwinter. Typically, though, only old houseplants bloom – and then only if overwintered in the greenhouse and away from the lights that disrupt the blooming cycle. Flowers are white, star-shaped affairs to ½ an inch across and borne at the ends of branches.

This normally desert-growing plant has evolved several strategies to deal with extended periods of drought. Its very succulence is the main means of combating drought, but it also has other tricks up its sleeve. Jade plant – and as later learned, many other kinds of plants adapted to drought conditions – has modified a unique way of photosynthesis that helps conserve water. It’s called CAM photosynthesis.

Tips
  • Plants in the Crassulaceae family can be propagated by leaf cuttings. Place a few healthy leaves on moist soil and watch a new plant grow! (But be patient – it’ll take four months or more.)
Facts
  • Jade plant is native to the Cape Town region of South Africa and was one of the early plants – along with geraniums – introduced to Europe by Dutch settlers in the 1600s.
  • CAM photosynthesis is now known to occur in more than 30 different plant families throughout the world – but all are from areas with prolonged droughts.
 
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