aloe vera plant in arizona Buy Aloe Vera Orange Phoenix, AZ | Aloe barbadensis
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aloe vera plant in arizona

aloe vera plant in arizona Buy Aloe Vera Orange Phoenix, AZ | Aloe barbadensis

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aloe vera plant in arizona Buy Aloe Vera Orange Phoenix, AZ | Aloe barbadensisThe Medicinal Aloe Vera That Thrives in Phoenix Heat Aloe vera (Aloe barbadensis) orange flowering variety is the classic medicinal aloe that practically grows itself in the Phoenix Valley. This vigorous succulent forms large, fleshy rosettes of gel filled leaves prized for centuries for their soothing, healing properties, while sending up tall spikes of vibrant orange flowers that attract hummingbirds. Whether you're creating a medicinal herb garden

The Medicinal Aloe Vera That Thrives in Phoenix Heat

Aloe vera (Aloe barbadensis) — orange flowering variety — is the classic medicinal aloe that practically grows itself in the Phoenix Valley. This vigorous succulent forms large, fleshy rosettes of gel-filled leaves prized for centuries for their soothing, healing properties, while sending up tall spikes of vibrant orange flowers that attract hummingbirds. Whether you're creating a medicinal herb garden in Scottsdale, adding a tough foundation plant in Mesa, or building a low-water landscape in Gilbert — orange-flowering Aloe Vera is the ultimate set-it-and-forget-it desert plant.

Aloe Vera (Orange) Plant Details

Attribute Detail
Scientific Name Aloe barbadensis (Aloe vera)
Common Names Aloe Vera, Medicinal Aloe, Orange Aloe Vera
Mature Height 1–2 feet
Mature Width 2–3 feet
Growth Rate Fast — fills in quickly in Phoenix's warm climate
Sun Full sun to partial shade. Handles reflected heat.
Water Low once established. Highly drought-tolerant.
USDA Zones 9–11 (Phoenix is Zone 9b–10a)
Soil Well-draining. Adapts to Arizona caliche soils.
Foliage Evergreen — thick, gel-filled leaves year-round
Bloom Color Orange flower spikes, winter to spring
Special Feature Medicinal gel — soothing for burns and skin care

Aloe Vera (Orange) Uses in Phoenix Landscapes

Medicinal & Herb Gardens

Orange Aloe Vera is the cornerstone of any medicinal garden in the Phoenix area. Plant it near a kitchen door or patio for easy access to fresh gel whenever you need it for minor burns, sunburn relief, or skin care. It pairs perfectly with other useful desert plants like rosemary, lavender, and Mexican oregano.

Mass Plantings & Ground Cover

Thanks to its fast growth and prolific offsetting habit, Aloe Vera makes an excellent living ground cover for sunny slopes, medians, and large landscape beds. Plant 2–3 feet apart and watch them fill in within a season. A mass planting of orange-flowering Aloe Vera in bloom is a stunning sight that stops traffic in neighborhoods across Scottsdale, Tempe, and Chandler.

Pool-Friendly & Patio Plantings

Aloe Vera's tidy rosette form and lack of thorny spines make it a great choice for pool surrounds and patio borders. It won't drop messy leaves, tolerates splash-out chlorine, and stays green year-round. The orange flower spikes add a pop of color from winter through spring.

Container Gardens

Aloe Vera thrives in containers on patios, balconies, and covered porches throughout the Valley. Use a well-draining cactus mix and a pot with drainage holes. Container plants are easy to move to afternoon shade during the most extreme summer heat if desired.

Best Time to Plant Aloe Vera in Phoenix

Fall (October–November) is the ideal planting window — warm soil encourages rapid root establishment while cooler air reduces transplant stress. Spring (February–April) is the second-best window. Aloe Vera is forgiving enough to plant almost any time of year in Phoenix, but avoid transplanting during the peak of summer heat (June–August) if possible.

How to Plant Aloe Vera

  1. Dig wide, not deep — 2–3x the root ball width, same depth as the container.
  2. Check for caliche — break through any hardpan layer for good drainage.
  3. Backfill with native soil — Aloe Vera isn't picky; a light 20% perlite blend improves drainage.
  4. Spacing — 2–3 feet apart for mass plantings; 3 feet for individual specimens.
  5. Water basin — build a 3–4 inch ring around the plant to direct water to roots.
  6. Mulch — 2–3 inches of gravel or decomposed granite mulch around the base.

Watering Aloe Vera in Phoenix

First Year Watering Schedule

Weeks 1–2: Every 2–3 days, deep and slow. Month 1–2: Every 3–4 days. Month 3–6: Every 7–10 days (every 5–7 days in peak summer). After Year 1: Every 10–14 days in summer; every 3–4 weeks in winter. Aloe Vera stores water in its thick leaves — overwatering causes more problems than underwatering.

Drip Irrigation

Place one 1-GPH emitter 8–12 inches from the base. Run for 20–30 minutes per session. Established plants are remarkably drought-tolerant and may need supplemental water only every 2–3 weeks in summer.

How fast does Aloe Vera grow in Phoenix?
Very fast. Expect a 1-gallon plant to reach full mature size (2–3 feet across) within 1–2 years in the ground. It also produces abundant offsets (pups) that can be divided and replanted or shared.

What's the difference between orange and yellow Aloe Vera?
The orange and yellow varieties are the same species (Aloe barbadensis) with different flower colors. Growth habit, size, and care are identical — it comes down to which bloom color you prefer in your landscape.

Can I use the gel from this Aloe Vera?
Yes! The thick, gel-filled leaves are the same medicinal aloe used for centuries. Simply cut a mature outer leaf and apply the clear gel directly to minor burns, sunburn, or irritated skin.

Is Aloe Vera pet friendly?
Aloe Vera gel can cause mild gastrointestinal upset if ingested by dogs or cats. Plant it in areas where pets don't typically graze, or choose a pet-safe alternative if your animals are plant-chewers.

You May Also Like

Aloe vera - yellow — The yellow-flowering version of the same beloved medicinal aloe.

Aloe Hybrid — A variegated, fast-growing aloe hybrid with colorful rosettes and vibrant blooms.

Agave Sisalana — A bold, architectural agave for dramatic desert landscapes.

Aloe Banseii — A tree-forming aloe that adds vertical drama to succulent gardens.

How Many Aloe Vera Do I Need?

Orange Aloe Vera fills fast into clumps 2 to 3 feet wide, so it works beautifully as a living groundcover or mass planting. Plant about 30 inches on center for full coverage. Use this guide to estimate counts by area:

Area to Cover Plants Needed (30 in spacing)
25 sq ft 4 plants
50 sq ft 8 plants
100 sq ft 16 plants
200 sq ft 32 plants

For a single specimen or container, one plant fills out within a season or two. Because it pups so freely, a mass planting knits together faster than the spacing suggests, and the extra offsets can be divided and replanted elsewhere.

Aloe Vera Season-by-Season in Phoenix

  • Spring (Feb to Apr): Tall orange spikes bloom and draw hummingbirds, while pups push out fast around the base. A strong second planting window.
  • Summer (May to Sep): Vigorous in full sun and reflected heat through triple-digit highs, though in the most extreme reflected spots a little afternoon shade keeps leaves from sun-stressing. Monsoon rain is welcome with fast-draining soil: keep added water light.
  • Fall (Oct to Nov): Prime planting season. Roots establish quickly in warm soil and flower spikes begin forming for the cool-season bloom.
  • Winter (Dec to Jan): Evergreen and the main bloom season, but be aware Aloe Vera is only lightly frost-tolerant: leaves can show damage below about 28 to 30°F. Cover plants or move containers under cover on hard frost nights in the coldest pockets of the Valley.

At a Glance

✔ Hummingbird-Friendly   ✔ Pollinator-Friendly   ✔ Heat-Loving (Reflected-Heat Tolerant)   ✔ Drought-Tolerant   ✔ Pool-Friendly (Low-Litter)   ✔ Spineless   ✔ Evergreen   ✔ Low-Maintenance   ✔ Deer & Rabbit-Resistant

Plant It With

Is Aloe Vera Right for Your Yard?

One of the easiest desert plants you can grow: full sun to part shade, fast-draining soil, very low water, and soft spineless rosettes that are safe around pools, patios, and walkways. It is ideal for medicinal herb gardens, mass plantings, and slopes, and the gel is always on hand for minor burns. Not a fit if your coldest beds drop well below freezing without protection, or if pets tend to chew leaves: the gel can upset a dog or cat's stomach.

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Mama N
Omaha, US
★★★★★ 5
The most important book a parent will ever read
Format: Hardcover
I have so much I want to say about this book and how it changed my perspective to parenting for the better. There are so many books about what to expect when you first find out you’re pregnant and how to go about the next newborn/infant stage. There’s not enough talk about needing to read parenting books beyond the first 12 months. To be honest, I found this book the most motivating, inspiring and HELPFUL Of them all. This book is definitely geared towards the toddler and beyond years, and I really wish I had read this earlier. Please do yourself a favor and read this book prior to toddler years. Even if you think you know how to go about helping foster your on childs independent, appropriate, and emotional development, as well as sibling/ friendship hardship in the correct manner, I challenged you to read this book to make sure what you’re doing (or plan to do) is truly right. This book helped me develop the tools (actions and word choices) that I needed to improve my reactions towards undesirable words or actions by my toddler. This in turn has reduced her outbursts (Both physical and verbal) and has given her anymore independent and an emotionally stable/strong relationship with herself and everyone else. This is especially for those strong willed and emotionally intelligent/ sensitive children. To be honest, I even learned a lot about how to navigate adult relationships better. I learned a little bit (maybe more than I want to admit) about myself too. 10/10.
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Reviewed in the United States on June 11, 2025
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Louis Liu
Draper, US
★★★★★ 5
After all, chidren are good inside.
Format: Kindle
Parenting is about how parents treat their kids. One important aspect of what counts for good parenting is how we face the kids’ negative behaviors. When we were children, our parents did not respect our emotional needs. They only scolded us when we were naughty. After we become parents, we treat our kids the way our parents treated us. Dr Becky proposes in this book, contrary to what our parents thought, children are all good inside and thus we should treat children’s bad behaviors as if their misbehaviors are signs that they don’t know how to express their needs. With this assumption, there are three implications for parenting. First, as children are good inside, what they do outside should not be our focus. Whether it is emotional tantrums, not listening, aggressive tantrums, sibling rivalry, rudeness and defiance, whining, lying, food habits, parents should not pay too much attention to it. Instead, parents should see the cause that contributes to the resulting negative behavior. Take whining as an example. Whining, according to a Cambridge dictionary, means ‘to make a long, high, sad sound’. As parents we are easily annoyed by whining and we quickly think that kids are disrespectful. In Dr Becky’s view, whining=strong desire+powerlessness. Children whine because they feel helpless and ‘indicate they feel alone and unseen in their desires’ (p.188), rather than because they are arrogant. What does this imply? Do we have to give in, knowing that they are desperate for connection and feeling powerful? The answer is no. Dr Becky said ‘while our job as parents is to make decisions that we feel are right for our kids even in the face of protest, we can still practice understanding and connecting’. While saying no, which they probably know they do need, at the same time we can give them the sympathy they also need. Thinking that kids are bad inside often leads to power struggles or arguments when we request them to request in an appropriate tone again. Kids are good inside, and thus we should focus our attention on how to respond to their helplessness rather than their whines. Secondly, not only should we not focus on their outside behavior, we should also be aware that what is on the surface often contrasts with what the kid feels inside. One of the most-feared emotions we are afraid to see children have is anger, also known as tantrums. When children are angry, they display undesirably violent behaviors such as hitting others. Dr Becky points out that they hit not because they are angry, but because they are scared. When we adults are afraid, we may also kill people if we are irrational. Children have not yet developed their prefrontal cortex which is responsible for logic and language, and so the most severe reaction they can possibly express is through tantrums. We may wonder why children are afraid: they are “terrified of the sensations, urges, and feelings coursing inside their body” (p.158) such as frustration and anxiety. These feelings which adults are used to feel scary to kids. Naming the right emotion is the first step to solving the problem and helping kids to cope with it. Only after we identify correctly the emotion the children are experiencing can we as parents exert the right method to deal with the out-of-control behavior. Clearly we know reprimanding our kids is not correct because “they are good inside”. To stop the kid's aggressive tantrums effectively, parents should assert their authority. Parents should show the confidence that they are in charge of the situation. Then, the next critical step is to maintain the kid's safety. Regardless of how the kid feels, the parent should stop the dangerous behavior the kid is engaging in, which Dr Becky calls containment. She says it best: “kids don’t feel good when they are out of control”. That we assert our authority and contain even though kids are not happy on the surface is an act of love, maturity, and responsibility. If we don't, not only will it cause injury, it will make children think we evade responsibility, thus making them feel more overwhelmed. To conclude, as parents we need to know our roles and our kids’ roles. Our job is to keep our children safe, both physically and psychologically. We need to remember that a gap exists between kids’ abilities to feel and their abilities to regulate their feelings, and the gap manifests as deregulated behavior. While it is children’s job to explore and express their feelings, it is our job to help them regulate them by setting physical boundaries, validating their emotions, and being empathetic to their feelings. We are our kids’ role models. We are demonstrating to our kids the emotion regulation skills. As our kids are allowed to shout and protest because they are doing their jobs, we are also allowed to upset them when we set boundaries. We just need to remember that to do our job well, we must learn to connect with and understand them more because after all, children are good inside.
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Reviewed in the United States on February 4, 2025
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RICHARD MERCER
Lake Worth, US
★★★★★ 4
Good read
Very good basic subjective author. Some modern therapist offer a different perspective on rewards and child behavior, but to be expected in academia. As with any behavioral psychology observable or behavioral science documents - measure the subjective amount against the scientific controlling evidence being offerred. If no evidence - it is just subjective opinion.
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Reviewed in the United States on March 7, 2026
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Courtney
Draper, US
★★★★★ 5
Not JUST a Parenting Book
Format: Hardcover
Good Inside and Dr. Becky are everything the world needs now. A strong, sturdy perspective that truly, wholeheartedly believes in the good inside us all. That is truly not cheap talk. It. is. the. real. deal. This book is a parenting book that covers big picture philosophical understandings of parenthood AND the more practical, day-to-day implementation of said philosophies. Dr. Becky is incredible about explaining the underlying reasons for why kids do what they do and why WE respond as we do and then she talks us through exactly how to apply the "most generous interpretation" so that we can do better for the next generation AND for ourselves. Good Inside is also a REparenting book and a leadership book. She will teach you how to show up for the realness of your own life for yourself and for the kids that you love most dearly. Truly, there is not a better way to spend your money. Maybe go ahead and stock up on highlighters and your favorite pens too because, if you're like me, you will be highlighting and underlining left and right. It's truly that game-changing. Get ready to finally understand your job description as a parent and your kids' job descriptions as wonderful, little growing humans in the world. And if you yourself need healing from your own childhood, this will open the door for that too. I know that you, dear Amazon review reader, do not know me but I am not really prone to hyperbole. I do not feel it is an exaggeration to say that Dr. Becky and Good Inside is game-changing. This purchase is truly an investment in yourself and the kind of parent and person you want to be and an investment in your kids and their future.
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Reviewed in the United States on September 14, 2022
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Amazon Customer
Grantham, US
★★★★★ 5
Good advice overall
Format: Paperback
This is an interesting read to help with your child’s self esteem and behavior. The first several chapters on the psychology behind behavior were more helpful and interesting than the second half of the book that addresses specific behaviors. Also, if you follow Dr Becky on social media, most of her advice is already in her content. However, I’m glad I read this book, even it wasn’t life changing.
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Reviewed in the United States on March 20, 2026

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