Succulents are a beautiful and colorful species. Succulents owns the second largest fan base after orchid. Besides possessing a beautiful appearance, succulents are also very easy to grow and care for. This article is for those who love purity like little angels
1 Pachyphytum oviferum
Cre Gaymessucculents
2 Echeveria Laui
Cre Gaymessucculents
E. laui is a small succulent belonging to the Crassulaceae botanical family. The plant is stemless and thornless and has a dense rosette of leaves which can grow up to 15 cm in diameter. Leaves are fleshy, flat, obovate, light glaucous to pink in color. Blooming occurs in late spring and early summer and blossom are borne by long stalks; flowers are numerous, thin, peachy to pink and the plant changes hue depending on sun-exposure. The plant is covered with white wax called pruina, and usually deos not branches but has a solitary habit
3 Cotyledon undulata
Cre Gaymessucculents
Cotyledon undulate, also known as silver crown or silver ruffles, is a small succulent shrub up to 50 cm tall. It has unusual grey undulating leaves that give it a very sculptural shape. Cotyledon undulata is perhaps the most widely grown Cotyledon. The stems are covered with a thick, white, coating. The leaves are shaped like scallop shells, grey-white to blue-grey, with wavy edges and a powdery waxy coating over the whole leaf. The flowers are orange to yellow.
4 Echeveria 'Crispate Beauty 2"
5 Sedum sinforosanum
Sedum sinforosanum is a small succulent that forms rosettes of thick fleshy grey-green to rose-colored leaves with margins markedly pink. It produces offsets with short stems to form a dense clump. The rosettes grow up to 3.6 inches (9 cm) in diameter. Stems are up to 3.2 inches (8 cm) long and about 0.2 inches (0.5 cm) in diameter. Leaves are obovate, ending in a sharp point, up to 1.4 inches (3.5 cm) long and up to 0.8 inches (2 cm) wide. Flowers are star-shaped, white with a slight pink tinge and reddish apex of the petals. They appear in clusters on slender, 2 to 4 per rosette, up to 3.6 inches (9 cm) long stalks in spring and summer.
6 Echeveria peacockii
Luminous, Echeveria peacockii (Peacock Echeveria) is an evergreen succulent with pretty rosettes, 6 in. wide (15 cm), packed with over 20 spoon-shaped, pointed, pale powdery blue-gray leaves adorned with red edges and tips when exposed to bright light. In summer, it sends up a 10 in.
7 Echeveria Laui
8 Haworthia obtusa 'marin'
9 Mammillaria bocasana
Mammillaria bocasana (Powder Puff Cactus) is a small clumping cactus that tends to form large clumps over time. The spherical stems, up to 5 in. tall (12 cm) and 3 in. wide (8 cm), are covered with silky white hairs, with each cluster surrounding a yellow-to-red hooked spine.
10 Echeveria agavoides
Echeveria agavoides is a small, stemless succulent plant, 8–12 centimetres (3.1–4.7 in) tall, with a rosette of leaves 7–15 centimetres (2.8–5.9 in) in diameter. It is often solitary, but old plants in good condition grow offsets. The leaves are green, triangular, thicker (6 mm) and more acute than the other echeverias - hence the explanation of their name agavoides, "looking like an agave". Some varieties with bright light have reddish (or bronze) tips and some forms have slightly red to very red margins. The inflorescences in summer appear on slender, single-sided cymes up to 50 centimetres (20 in) long. The flowers are pink, orange or red, the petals tipped with dark yellow
11 Haworthia cymbiformis variegata
Haworthia cymbiformis 'Variegata' is an attractive succulent that forms stemless rosettes of thick fleshy boat-shaped leaves with irregular light-green and white longitudinal stripes. The rosettes grow up to 3 inches (8 cm) tall and 4 inches (10 cm) in diameter. Flowers are tubular, white to pale pink with brownish-green veins, and appear on slender, up to 8 inches (20 cm) tall inflorescences from mid-spring to early summer.
12 Rechsteineria Leucotricha
Sinningia leucotricha is a tuberous perennial with silvery white foliage and large tubular red-orange flowers and is native to Brazil. With age, the tuber can eventually reach sizes of approximately 30cm. It is often grown like a succulent or caudiciform, and will tolerate periods of drought. It is herbaceous and will shed old leaves before entering a period of dormancy, and then new foliage appears in the spring.