Happy Urban Dirt

Yellow Flower Succulent: The Best Options for Your Garden

If you love the yellow flowered succulent, you are probably thinking of others that have the same ones. And if we add to that the fact that this type of plant with flowers of this color is said to attract good luck and money, do you want to know what it is?

Well said and done, here is a selection of yellow flowered succulents you might want to have in your home. Take a look at all of them!

Fabiola Echeveria

Echeveria Fabiola Fuente_Succulent Alleya

Fuente_Succulent Alley

Fabiola echeveria is one of the most stunning. And although the flowers are not completely (entirely) yellow, if you look at the pictures you will see that they are pink on the outside but yellow on the inside.

When it comes to care, this succulent is fairly straightforward. It is a rosette of fleshy leaves and requires a lot of delicate, little watering, and some attention to the ambient temperature. It blooms in spring and summer, creating a floral rod (sometimes double), from which bell-shaped flowers of these colors grow.

Echeveria derenbergii

Another echeveria that you should consider if you want a yellow flowered succulent is this one. It is very similar to Fabiola echeveria, but in this case the flowers are yellow on the outside with some red accents. As for the leaves, when the sun hits them, their tips usually turn reddish. This gives them a special character, as their edges take on a red colour that contrasts with the darker green they take on.

The flowers also grow from a flower spike (sometimes from several) and are bell-shaped, but point upwards (they do not droop unless they become droopy under the influence of weight).

Tiger Faucaria

We continue the series of yellow-flowered succulents. It is not a common succulent, rather only collectors of these plants pay attention to itbut if you belong to this group, you will notice that its body is made up of several leaves with thorns at the ends (although these usually do not sting).

Inside these leaves, in the center of the plant, a flower shoot is formed, from which completely yellow flowers with very numerous and narrow petals grow.

Fenestraria rhopalophylla ssp. Aurantiaca

This yellow-flowered succulent, commonly called fenestraria (parched), comes from Africa and is composed of skinny columns stuck together at the ends. From the joints of these stems come the flower stalks. But be careful, don’t be fooled.

And when the petals start to appear in the cocoon, you will see them in pink color, and as they grow, you will see that they are yellow inside.

When the flower opens, it will lose its pink tint and give way to a very striking, dazzling yellow or even orange colour (especially in contrast to the green of the plant).

Hatoria salicornioides

Hatoria salicornioides

This plant with stems like a tree and leaves like fingers will catch your eye. They are basically green (although if the sun hits them, they can turn a shade more red). Additionally, during the flowering period, it is normal for the plant to bloom yellow. (or yellow and orange), thus attracting money and success.

When it comes to care, keep in mind that while it does need sun, if exposed to too much and high temperatures, it can easily burn or lose its color. It also requires a bit more watering than other succulents (you’ll notice this because the “fingers” start to wrinkle and lose their strength).

Lithops lesliei

Lithops lesliei has the ability to bloom in autumn, although it opens its flower only for 2–3 hours in the afternoon (it is closed the rest of the time). But it’ll last you a week or so. And what color do you think the flowers are? Well, yes, yellow.

It is characterized by the fact that it consists of many yellow but white petals in the center of the flower, from where the pistils grow, clustered in groups and white until they begin to turn yellow.

Machairophyllum bijlii

This yellow-flowered succulent will catch your attention because it is a plant made up of fleshy, elongated leaves.ending with a point that can grow in different directions (in this sense it is a bit cluttered) or twist. But what brings us here and why we mention it is that in spring and summer you will have flowers consisting of very diminutive petals and yellow color (inside they are a bit white or with a very pale yellow shade).

The seat is edged

The characteristic feature of sedum acre is that it has more or less hefty stems, as if they were pillars. However, during the flowering period they produce flowers with five yellow petals at the ends. In fact, watching them is a remarkable sight.

Senecio kleiniiformis

Senecio kleiniiformis Source_GardenTags

Source: GardenTags

Senecio kleiniiformis, like many senecios, has an captivating shape. It will look like a succulent and not be one at the same time. It consists of stems from which elongated leaves of peculiar shape grow. In addition, it produces quite long flower stalks, of which at the end it has a multitude of buds, which, when opened, will reveal diminutive yellow flowers.

yellow-leafed kalanchoe

If you want a plant that looks more like a normal one (leaves and flowers), you can choose Kalanchoe. As you know, they can produce flowers in many colors: orange, red, white… and even yellow.

They are very straightforward to care for and the leaves will look like wax. They require a little more humidity than other succulents, but in return they will bloom all year round.

Echeveria pulidonis

This red-edged echeveria is one of the prettiest with its all-yellow, bell-shaped flowers. It blooms in spring and summer, and because it is a rosette, it spreads easily and can be suckered to plant recent ones.

As you can see, there is no succulent with yellow flowers, in fact, you can find plenty of them. How about starting a group where success and money can come to your home and stay there forever?

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