Crassula Fallwood
Crassula Fallwood
Parents : Crassula 'Fernwood' & C. perfoliata var. falcata. A hybrid by John Trager.Distributed as ISI 92-43 : "Rogers Weld made a hybrid of C. namaquensis ssp. comptonii with C. susannae and called it 'Fernwood' after his nursery in southern California. John Trager has crossed this with C. falcata to produce 'Fallwood' which somewhat resembles 'Pink Pyramid', offered last year, but with flowers spanning a spectum of autumnal colours : yellow green in bud, then orange, finally deep russet when dry.
Contributed by @Yollymac
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Full sun
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Very little water
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Not Frost hardy
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Light and free draining
Common name
Crassula Fallwood
Latin name
Crassula Fallwood
type
Succulent
family
Crassulaceae
ph
5.0 - 7.5 Acid - Neutral
Plant & bloom calendar
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Best time to plant
full grown dimensions
Crassula Fallwood
Parents : Crassula 'Fernwood' & C. perfoliata var. falcata. A hybrid by John Trager.Distributed as ISI 92-43 : "Rogers Weld made a hybrid of C. namaquensis ssp. comptonii with C. susannae and called it 'Fernwood' after his nursery in southern California. John Trager has crossed this with C. falcata to produce 'Fallwood' which somewhat resembles 'Pink Pyramid', offered last year, but with flowers spanning a spectum of autumnal colours : yellow green in bud, then orange, finally deep russet when dry.
Propagation by cuttings
From Early Spring TO Late Summer
Crassulas can be grown from leaf cuttings taken in spring and summer. Pull a leaf from the main stem, leave it to dry for a day, then place it on the surface of the growing compost. The leaf will form roots and eventually, a small rosette will appear at the base. Remove and pot up the new plant when well rooted.
Planting
From Early Spring TO Early Summer
Crassulas need a sharply drained soil, such as 2 parts John Innes potting compost number 2 and 1 part course sand or grit. They do best on a sunny window ledge and in winter, require a minimum temperature of 7C. Repot every second year in early spring.