Six on Saturday – Cardinals and Roses

My garden tour this Saturday included visiting Mrs. Cardinal, who is still sitting in her nest and checking out the flowers on my Desert Roses. Having grown up gardening in the Deep South, a bastion of summer humidity, I have never grown real roses as fungus and I just don’t get along. In South Florida, Desert Roses (Adenium obesum) can be easily grown in containers and thrive on benign neglect. At long last, I have roses.

Mrs. Cardinal in position:

Desert Rose in pink:

Desert Rose in red:

These plants are from the desert of the Arabian peninsula and are considered succulents. The trunks can take unusual forms. They prefer dry conditions and rarely need water. I have enjoyed these plants in containers, they are evergreen, have interesting forms and flower regularly. They are available in many colors and some people collect them. I prune mine occasionally and water and fertilize if it crosses my mind. Mostly they sit in the blazing full sun and bask.

That’s it from South Florida this week. We are enjoying a cool, dry spell of spring weather and it is a beautiful day. I need to get outside!

To see more SOS posts, visit Jim’s blog, Garden Ruminations and follow the links in the comments section.

24 comments on “Six on Saturday – Cardinals and Roses

  1. Rosie Amber's avatar Rosie Amber says:

    Very pretty. I hope Mrs Cardinal has a successful brood too.

    Liked by 1 person

  2. Tracy's avatar Tracy says:

    Ah, Mrs. Cardinal! I like adenium, yours are looking lovely.

    Liked by 1 person

  3. Your Desert Roses are really interesting. Would they make a good house plant in a sunny window?

    Liked by 1 person

  4. fredgardener's avatar fredgardener says:

    Desert rose plant is truly a beautiful plant ! I have never tried growing it so far… I follow a guy from the Emirates on Twitter who has a very nice collection, (but I think it’s even hotter there than where you live)

    Liked by 1 person

    • People grow them from seed here. They are very easy to root as well. It is rare to get a seed pod. I have had these for maybe 8 years and never had seed. I’m not sure how they fare as house plants. Very poisonous.

      Liked by 1 person

  5. A lovely mother cardinal!

    Liked by 1 person

  6. tonytomeo's avatar tonytomeo says:

    Desert rose is not bothered by the humidity there?

    Liked by 1 person

  7. I am now a desert rose fan, so beautiful! Good luck Mrs Cardinal, I hope you have a fine brood.

    Liked by 1 person

  8. Sarah Rajkotwala's avatar Sarah Rajkotwala says:

    Love the Desert roses, they sound like they would grow well here! 🌸💞

    Liked by 1 person

  9. Beautiful blooms, and this is a great reminder that most of us can grow things in pots–both inside and outside–that might not grow as well naturally in our gardens. I had a potted lemon tree that I brought indoors every winter (I live in the Midwest), and it performed well for about a decade…outdoors for 6 months, indoors for 6 months.

    Liked by 1 person

  10. Cathy's avatar Cathy says:

    I had heard of desert roses, but I don’t think I had seen any before. It would love our paved yard in summer as it gets really hot there!

    Like

Leave a reply to theshrubqueen Cancel reply