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Other Succulent Forms
Mainly Adeniums and Pachypodiums
Adenium obesum seedlings (dicots)
Agave seedlings (monocots)
Alluaudia comosa (note that the flat round leaves join at one side to the stem)
Aloe forest
Aloes in the center and lower right, with Haworthias at top and bottom and Gasterias at the right
Aloe munchii, a tall skinny type
Aloe haworthioides
Aloe species (it is so rigid and spiny that it ought to be an Agave)
Bromeliad (a terrestrial type that is succulent)
Conophytum johannis-winkleri
Dyckias
Echeveria rosettes of various kinds
Euphorbia millii and relatives
Echeveria “Branco”
Euphorbia, mixed branching types (analogues in the Old World of the cacti of the New World)
Tall Euphorbia with seasonal leaves, with a Euphorbia friend on either side
Euphorbia cutting, a type with seasonal leaves
Euphorbias, Medusa’s head type (llanaganii or caput-medusae)
Euphorbia obesa seedling, blooming already (it’s a girl)
Euphorbia obesa, showing classic spherical form
Faucaria tigrina (but those teeth are soft)
Jatropha podagrica (five plants)
Kalanchoes, various fuzzy types; two of the front ones are hybrids
Jatropha multifida seedlings just emerging
Lapidaria margaretae seedlings (eleven total)
Lapidaria margaretae seedlings (nine total)
Lithops, mixed( Demo Pot), some doing their annual skin shedding
Lithops, mixed (Demo Pot)
Lithops with seed pods forming
Lithops, probably aucampiae, having split into two pairs
Lithops divergens shedding its skin
Lithops divergens with seed pods
Lithops dorotheae
Lithops fulviceps
Lithops hookeri, Lithops otzeniana, and Lapidaria margaretae
Lithops julii ssp Fuller (Fullergreen)
Lithops julii fulleri, L. karasmontana bella, etc.
Lithops karasmontana, L. karasmontana Mickbergensis, L. marmorata
Lithops lesliei v albinica
Lithops lesliei, L. pseudotruncatella, L. dinteri
Lithops naureeniae
Lithops naureeniae with seed pod
Mesembryanthemum, probably Glottiphylum
Pachypodium lamerei
Pachypodium rosalatum rosaatum
Petopentia natalensis, showing caudex and a few leaves (the vine continues upward for almost two feet)
Pseudolithos migiuritinus seedlings (no, no a Lithops, just looks like one)
Unknown succulent that grows in “strings” (it was given to me; yes, it is alive and it blooms)
Sedum morganianum
Zehneria pallidinervia vine, showing a fruit (choice plant, with its triangular thick leaves!)
Various succulent vines, including Petopentia natalensis, Kedrostis species, Ipomoea platensis, Fockea edulis
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