Chick Charms® Trio - Berries and Cream™ - Sempervivum - 3.5" Pot

MSRP: $17.99
$14.99
(You save $3.00 )
(1) Write a Review
SKU:
CCTrioBerryC
UPC:
810061367215
Currently Available:
2

Product Description

Chick Charms® Trio - Berries and Cream™: A lovely trio that mixes smooth purples with a fuzzy, white cultivar. It makes for a pleasing combo whether planted in beds or in an outdoor container. The three rosettes are planted together in a 3.5" round pot. The varieties included are Berry Bomb, Cotton Candy, and Berry Blues. Hardy Zones 4-9 Sempervivum are succulent, rosette forming plants belonging to the Crassulaceae family. They are commonly known as Hens & Chicks, Houseleeks or Hen and Chickens. The main attraction of these plants is their colourful rosettes of leaves. The rosettes are most striking in the spring and summer but even in the winter when growth stops, many varieties remain attractively coloured. It is the endless range of different leaf shapes, colours and textures that make this group so interesting to enthusiasts. Sunlight brings out bright colors in Sempervivums. When planted in full shade or grown indoors away from a sunny window, many varieties tend to fade to a plain green color. However, in hotter weather during the summer and in the southern United States, afternoon shade can actually help plant colors last longer. The soil’s fertility, pH, moisture and structure, as well as the temperature and age of the plant (some take up to three years for full color) also effect coloration. Indoors, Hens & Chicks should be grown in a sunny window and watered when dry.
  • Sunlight brings out bright colors in Sempervivums
  • Zones 4-9 or indoors
  • Full sun for maximum color
  • Easy to grow
  • Immediate shipping

Product
Reviews

  • 5
    Great condition

    Posted by Nicole Vabre on Aug 5th 2022

    Came to me well-packaged and in great shape for going through the USPS. Shipped out very quickly, so I didn't have to wait too long to have these in my hand. Can't wait to get these ladies in-ground next spring and see them explode, which they were already doing inside their nursery pot - it was packed with lots of chicks!