aloe vera edible plant Buy Tangerine Aloe Phoenix, AZ | Aloe Hybrid
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aloe vera edible plant

aloe vera edible plant Buy Tangerine Aloe Phoenix, AZ | Aloe Hybrid

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Description

aloe vera edible plant Buy Tangerine Aloe Phoenix, AZ | Aloe HybridPhoenix's Most Vivid Winter Blooming Succulent Tangerine Aloe (Aloe arborescens ferox Tangerine) is a stunning hybrid that delivers the best of both parent plants the bold, architectural rosettes of Aloe ferox combined with the prolific branching habit of Aloe arborescens. Rising 610 feet tall, this heat tough succulent explodes with brilliant orange flower spikes every winter, lighting up Scottsdale, Chandler, Mesa, and Gilbert landscapes when most

Phoenix's Most Vivid Winter-Blooming Succulent

Tangerine Aloe (Aloe arborescens × ferox ‘Tangerine’) is a stunning hybrid that delivers the best of both parent plants — the bold, architectural rosettes of Aloe ferox combined with the prolific branching habit of Aloe arborescens. Rising 6–10 feet tall, this heat-tough succulent explodes with brilliant orange flower spikes every winter, lighting up Scottsdale, Chandler, Mesa, and Gilbert landscapes when most other plants are dormant.

Tangerine Aloe Details

Attribute Detail
Scientific Name Aloe arborescens × ferox ‘Tangerine’
Common Names Tangerine Aloe, Torch Aloe Hybrid
Mature Height 6–10 feet
Mature Width 3–6 feet
Growth Rate Moderate — 1–2 feet per year in Phoenix
Sun Full sun to partial shade. Handles reflected heat from walls.
Water Low once established. Highly drought-tolerant.
USDA Zones 9–11 (Phoenix is Zone 9b–10a)
Soil Well-draining. Adapts to rocky or Arizona caliche soils.
Foliage Evergreen — spiny green rosettes year-round
Bloom Season Winter to early spring (December–March in Phoenix)

Tangerine Aloe Uses in Phoenix Landscapes

Winter Color Focal Point

Tangerine Aloe’s brilliant orange flower spikes make it the ultimate winter color plant for Phoenix gardens. While most landscapes look dormant from December through February, Tangerine Aloe puts on a show that attracts hummingbirds and turns heads. Plant as a standalone specimen or in groups of three for maximum impact.

Modern Desert & Xeriscape Design

The sculptural rosettes and dramatic height make Tangerine Aloe a natural fit for contemporary desert landscapes. Pair with boulders, decomposed granite, and complementary succulents like Agave americana or Desert Spoon for a bold, low-water design.

Drought-Tolerant Borders

Use Tangerine Aloe along property lines, driveways, or walkways for a striking border that requires almost no maintenance once established. Space plants 4–6 feet apart for a continuous display. The spiny leaves also provide a natural barrier.

Best Time to Plant Tangerine Aloe in Phoenix

Fall (October–November) is the ideal planting window. Warm soil encourages fast root establishment while cooler air reduces transplant stress. Your plant gets 6–8 months to settle in before its first Phoenix summer. Spring (February–April) is a solid second choice. Avoid summer planting when possible.

How to Plant Tangerine Aloe

  1. Dig wide, not deep — 2–3x the root ball width, same depth
  2. Check for caliche — break through any hardpan layer for drainage
  3. Backfill with native soil — add 20% pumice or perlite for extra drainage
  4. Spacing — 4–6 ft apart for borders; 6–8 ft for standalone specimens
  5. Water basin — build a 3–4 inch ring to direct water to roots
  6. Mulch — 2–3 inches of gravel mulch to retain moisture and suppress weeds

Watering Tangerine Aloe in Phoenix

First Year Watering Schedule

  • Weeks 1–2: Every 2–3 days, deep and slow
  • Month 1–2: Every 5–7 days
  • Month 3–6: Every 10–14 days (weekly in peak summer)
  • After Year 1: Every 2–3 weeks summer; monthly or less in winter

Drip Irrigation

Place one 1–2 GPH emitter 12–18 inches from the base. Established Tangerine Aloes are extremely drought-tolerant and store water in their thick leaves. Overwatering is more dangerous than underwatering — let soil dry completely between waterings.

How fast does Tangerine Aloe grow in Phoenix?
Tangerine Aloe grows at a moderate pace — expect 1–2 feet per year. Most plants reach their full 6–10 foot height within 4–6 years and begin blooming within 2–3 years of planting.

Is Tangerine Aloe drought tolerant?
Extremely. Once established, Tangerine Aloe stores water in its thick, succulent leaves and can survive extended drought. It’s one of the toughest flowering succulents for Phoenix landscapes.

When does Tangerine Aloe bloom?
Tangerine Aloe blooms from December through March in the Phoenix Valley. The bright orange flower spikes attract hummingbirds and provide winter color when few other plants are flowering.

What’s the difference between Tangerine Aloe and Cape Aloe?
Tangerine Aloe is a hybrid of Aloe arborescens and Aloe ferox (Cape Aloe). It combines Cape Aloe’s impressive size with the branching, multi-headed growth of Aloe arborescens, plus brighter tangerine-orange blooms.

You May Also Like

  • Cape Aloe — One of Tangerine Aloe’s parent plants with dramatic single-trunk form
  • Torch Aloe — A compact, prolific bloomer perfect for smaller spaces
  • Desert Spoon — Silvery-blue rosettes that complement Tangerine Aloe’s green foliage
  • Red Yucca — Coral flower spikes pair beautifully with Tangerine Aloe’s orange blooms

How Many Tangerine Aloe Do I Need?

Tangerine Aloe matures to 3 to 6 feet wide and multi-headed, so it works as a tall flowering screen or as a single architectural specimen. For a continuous screen or border, space plants about 4.5 feet apart:

Run Length Plants Needed (4.5 ft spacing)
10 ft 3 plants
20 ft 5 plants
30 ft 7 plants
50 ft 12 plants

As a focal point, plant one specimen on its own, or group 3 plants spaced 4 to 5 feet apart so each branching clump has room to show its form. Keep the spiny rosettes 3 to 4 feet back from walkways, patios, and pool edges.

Tangerine Aloe Season-by-Season in Phoenix

  • Spring (Feb–Apr): Tail end of the bloom season as the last orange spikes fade. New rosette growth pushes out and the plant branches. A strong secondary planting window.
  • Summer (May–Sep): Fully heat and reflected-heat tolerant in full sun. Stores water in its thick leaves and coasts through the hottest months. Monsoon rain is fine as long as the soil drains; no afternoon shade needed.
  • Fall (Oct–Nov): Prime planting season. Cooling weather sets flower buds for the coming winter show.
  • Winter (Dec–Jan): Peak bloom. Tall tangerine-orange spikes light up the yard and feed hummingbirds. Evergreen and hardy to about 25°F; cover young plants on rare hard-frost nights below that.

At a Glance

✔ Hummingbird-Friendly   ✔ Pollinator-Friendly   ✔ Heat-Loving (Reflected-Heat Tolerant)   ✔ Drought-Tolerant   ✔ Evergreen   ✔ Low-Maintenance   ✔ Fire-Wise   ✔ Deer & Rabbit-Resistant   ✔ Cold-Hardy to 25°F

Plant It With

  • Cape Aloe: a parent species with tall single-trunk form and matching winter blooms.
  • Hercules Tree Aloe: another branching Aloe arborescens for layered torch-bloom height.
  • Desert Spoon: silvery-blue rosettes that cool down the hot orange palette.
  • Red Yucca: coral flower spikes that echo the orange blooms at a lower level.

Is Tangerine Aloe Right for Your Yard?

Tangerine Aloe is a great fit for a full-sun or reflected-heat spot with room for a 3 to 6 foot wide, 6 to 10 foot tall flowering clump and sharp soil drainage, even in caliche. It rewards low water and almost no care with a reliable winter hummingbird show. Its leaves are spiny, so keep it away from walkways, play areas, and pool decks. It is not a fit if you need a compact plant, a shady site, or wet, poorly drained soil where the base can rot.

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I was pleased to see the new complete translation of Picatrix by Dan Attrell and David Porreca released in the Magic in History Series of Penn State Press. Picatrix is central to European astrological magic that it deserves an academic treatment. In addition, the willingness of Penn State Press to release a complete translation of Picatrix shows how things have changed in the past decade and the yeoman work done by mages such as Austin Coppock, Alexander Cummins and Cliff Low to delve deeply into astrological magic. As the translators point out at page 2 this version of Picatrix is, "specifically intended for students and scholars of the history of science and magic" In addition to the complete text of the Latin Picatrix in English translation the translators provide useful historical accounts of the pre-history of Picatrix and of the Latin text, Picatrix's exposition of the path of the sage, the use of the terminology nigromancia for astrological magic and the cosmology of Picatrix. Most interesting is a statistical breakdown of the types of magic in Picatrix. Finally, the translators elucidate their view of the importance of psychoactive drugs in ritual, though the translators insist at page 28 that they do not, "wish to suggest that all magic in the Picatrix can be explained away as drug addled delusion…" Coming as it does from an academic perspective, focused on history and social science the Attrell and Porreca translation provides a valuable orientation and background for the contemporary practitioner of astrological magic. No single translation can do justice to a work as complex as Picatrix and anyone who is serious about astrological magic or interested in Picatrix should certainly get a copy of the Attrell and Porreca translation as well as the Greer and Warnock Picatrix and the forthcoming Arabic Picatrix translation.
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I admire people who can do this kind of work. There’s a typo on p290.
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