Ever since we moved in to our house, there was a large Swan
Neck Agave in the back yard.
Agave attenuata |
new agave growing on the main agave |
It comes from the Asparagaceae family and its
latin/scientific name is Agave attenuata.
I’m not quite sure what subspecies it might be, since there are many
variations for plants, whether it is the difference in leaf shapes or even how
thick or thin the leaf might be may indicate eve indicate a different subspecies
or even a different species all together. This plant is known as a succulent
plant because it has thick leaves and comes from arid or subtropical climates
around the world and is originally from the arid coasts of Mexico.
This one at home has been growing for some time now and has
started leaning to one side that we needed to hold it up with some string. On
the stem of the main plant, there had been much smaller plants growing on the
stem of the main plant, as well as root-like structures on the nodes of the
main stem, underneath where the smaller plants were growing. They seem to look
like green-brown looking worms growing out, but they may be adventitious roots
for the new little plants and that they are ready to be taken off and replanted
elsewhere, which is one way of asexual reproduction.
after replanting , red ribbon for luck |
We needed to move it since we were fixing up the backyard
and putting in some drains to prevent the backyard from flooding in winter, so
we removed all the small new plants and cut the stem in half and moved it
further away from the drain, and replanted it making it face the fence and
hopefully it will bend away from the fence and face the sunlight like it used to.
Sources: The University of Melbourne’s Burnley Plant Guide