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large aloe vera plants

large aloe vera plants Buy Aloe Vera Yellow Phoenix, AZ | Aloe barbadensis

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large aloe vera plants Buy Aloe Vera Yellow Phoenix, AZ | Aloe barbadensisPhoenix's Classic Medicinal Aloe With Sunny Yellow Blooms Aloe vera (Aloe barbadensis) yellow flowering variety is the iconic medicinal aloe that thrives effortlessly across the Phoenix Valley. This fast growing succulent forms large rosettes of thick, gel filled leaves used for centuries to soothe burns and nourish skin, while producing cheerful yellow flower spikes that brighten the winter and spring landscape. Whether you're starting a medicinal

Phoenix's Classic Medicinal Aloe With Sunny Yellow Blooms

Aloe vera (Aloe barbadensis) — yellow flowering variety — is the iconic medicinal aloe that thrives effortlessly across the Phoenix Valley. This fast-growing succulent forms large rosettes of thick, gel-filled leaves used for centuries to soothe burns and nourish skin, while producing cheerful yellow flower spikes that brighten the winter and spring landscape. Whether you're starting a medicinal herb garden in Scottsdale, filling a sunny border in Tempe, or creating a drought-tolerant mass planting in Gilbert — yellow Aloe Vera is one of the easiest, most rewarding desert plants you can grow.

Aloe Vera (Yellow) Plant Details

Attribute Detail
Scientific Name Aloe barbadensis (Aloe vera)
Common Names Aloe Vera, Medicinal Aloe, Yellow 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 Yellow flower spikes, winter to spring
Special Feature Medicinal gel — soothing for burns and skin care

Aloe Vera (Yellow) Uses in Phoenix Landscapes

Medicinal & Herb Gardens

Yellow Aloe Vera is the must-have plant for any medicinal garden in the Phoenix area. Keep it near your kitchen or patio door for instant access to fresh soothing gel whenever you need it for sunburn, minor burns, or skin irritation. It pairs beautifully with rosemary, lavender, and other useful desert herbs.

Mass Plantings & Ground Cover

With its fast growth and prolific pup production, yellow Aloe Vera makes a fantastic living ground cover for sunny slopes, median strips, and large landscape beds. Space plants 2–3 feet apart and they'll fill in within a season. When the yellow flower spikes emerge in winter, the effect across a mass planting is spectacular — neighborhoods in Chandler, Mesa, and Peoria use this technique to great effect.

Pool-Friendly & Foundation Plantings

Aloe Vera's clean rosette form and lack of sharp spines make it ideal around pools, patios, and along foundation walls. It tolerates splash-out chlorine, won't drop messy leaves, and stays evergreen year-round. The sunny yellow blooms add warmth to any outdoor living space.

Container Gardens

Yellow Aloe Vera thrives in containers on patios, balconies, and porches throughout the Valley. Use a well-draining cactus mix in a pot with drainage holes. Containers make it easy to share pups with friends and neighbors — this is one of the most generous plants in the desert.

Best Time to Plant Aloe Vera in Phoenix

Fall (October–November) is the ideal window — warm soil encourages rapid root growth while cooler air reduces transplant stress, giving the plant 6–8 months of establishment before summer. Spring (February–April) is the second-best option. Aloe Vera is tough enough to plant almost year-round in Phoenix, but avoid the peak summer months (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 is not fussy; 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 to direct water to roots during establishment.
  6. Mulch — 2–3 inches of gravel or decomposed granite 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 is the most common mistake.

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 only need supplemental water every 2–3 weeks in summer.

How fast does yellow Aloe Vera grow in Phoenix?
Very fast. A 1-gallon plant can reach its full 2–3 foot spread within 1–2 years in the ground, and it produces abundant pups (offsets) that can be divided and replanted.

What's the difference between yellow and orange Aloe Vera?
The yellow and orange varieties are the same species (Aloe barbadensis) with different flower colors. Growth habit, size, medicinal properties, and care are identical — choose whichever bloom color you prefer.

Is the gel in yellow Aloe Vera the same as regular Aloe Vera?
Yes. The thick, clear gel inside the leaves has the same soothing, moisturizing properties regardless of flower color. Simply slice a mature outer leaf and apply the gel to minor burns, sunburn, or irritated skin.

Does Aloe Vera spread on its own?
Yes — Aloe Vera produces abundant offsets (pups) around the base of the mother plant. These can be left to form a colony or divided and replanted elsewhere. It's one of the easiest plants to propagate and share.

You May Also Like

Aloe vera - orange — The orange-flowering version of the same classic medicinal aloe.

Aloe Hybrid — A variegated hybrid aloe with colorful spotted rosettes and vibrant blooms.

Aloe humilis — A compact clustering aloe perfect for rock gardens and small spaces.

Aloe Banseii — A tree-forming aloe that adds dramatic height to succulent gardens.

How Many Aloe Vera Do I Need?

Yellow Aloe Vera is a fast, clumping rosette 2 to 3 feet wide that pups freely, so it reads as a living groundcover when planted in drifts. Use roughly 30-inch spacing (center to center) for solid coverage. Plant the table counts below, then let the pups knit the gaps closed within a season.

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 accent or container specimen, one plant is plenty: it will form its own colony over time.

Aloe Vera (Yellow) Season-by-Season in Phoenix

  • Spring (Feb to Apr): Tail end of the yellow bloom spikes, with a strong flush of new leaves and pups as soil warms. Excellent second planting window.
  • Summer (May to Sep): Takes full Valley heat and reflected heat in stride. Growth slows at the hottest peak. Monsoon humidity is fine as long as the soil drains: avoid standing water.
  • Fall (Oct to Nov): Prime planting season. Roots establish fast in warm soil ahead of the cool months.
  • Winter (Dec to Jan): Cheerful yellow flower spikes rise above the rosettes. Aloe Vera is lightly frost-tender: leaf tips can scorch below about 28 to 30°F. In a hard Valley frost, cover the plants overnight or site them under eaves or a canopy.

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

  • Aloe vera - orange: The orange-blooming twin, for a two-tone medicinal aloe drift.
  • Aloe Hybrid: Spotted, colorful rosettes that add pattern next to the clean green leaves.
  • Aloe humilis: A compact clumping aloe that fills the front edge of the bed.
  • Aloe Banseii: A taller tree-forming aloe for height behind the mass planting.

Is Aloe Vera (Yellow) Right for Your Yard?

Yes if you have full sun to light shade, fast-draining or amended caliche soil, and want an easy, useful, spineless succulent that is safe beside pools, walkways, and play areas. It shrugs off heat and drought and shares pups generously. Not the best fit if your spot stays wet or poorly drained, or if it sits in an unprotected frost pocket where temperatures regularly drop below the upper 20s without any cover.

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T. Snellgrove
Lexington, US
★★★★★ 5
Spoiler-free Review - The Martian Dialed Up To 11
Format: Kindle
If you loved the Martian in either book or movie form, Project Hail Mary will likely delight you. The main character (who I'll leave nameless to avoid spoilers) is nearly identical to The Martian's lead, Mark Watney. They have similar personalities, the same fundamental mission of surviving in a hostile environment, and both use real-world biology, chemistry, and physics to solve their problems from start to finish. The book provides an early test for whether or not you'll enjoy it: on page five, when our protagonist is being quizzed by an annoyingly paternalistic computer that is demanding to know the cube root of eight, our hero replies with the smart aleck answer: "two times e to the two-i-pi". If you find this interaction amusing, all good; if it's off-putting, turn back now. In fairness, Project Hail Mary shares The Martian's flaws as well. The protagonist's character is a bit better developed - but only slightly. The conflict is entirely man-vs-environment. And though the protagonist is often in situations that might cause one to ponder the essential truths of the human condition, he never does. His personality and behavior as a sarcastic problem-solving scientist / engineer are pitch-perfect but the book rarely goes any deeper. He has an established motivation and a flaw to be overcome - but these are really just superficial grace-notes (see what I did there?). This is not Crime and Punishment. Instead, it's a page-turning action-hero book - where instead of firing shots, the action hero saves the day by doing science really well. Books that celebrate real science are rare, so if that's what you came for, you're going to love what Project Hail Mary delivers. Although largely similar, there are four main ways in which Project Hail Mary differs on the Martian so I'll touch on those now: 1. The stakes are higher - much higher! In The Martian, Mark Watney is already a bit of a super hero - he's an astronaut after all - and all he really needs to do is stay alive. In Project Hail Mary, our hero is much more of an every-man and his job is nothing less than to save the human race. 2. The Martian is told in chronological order. In Project Hail Mary, our hero awakens with a serious case of amnesia and can't even remember his own name. He starts his adventures at essentially the most dull part of his recent life. As time passes he both tackles dramatic new challenges and remembers the wild adventures that brought him here. Andy Weir does a fantastic job of interweaving the past and the present and the result is a very effective narrative framework that lands on a "Wow!" moment at the end of nearly every chapter. 3. Project Hail Mary is a buddy story. In The Martian, Mark Watney is alone in his battle against the elements of Mars for nearly the entire book. By contrast, Project Hail Mary, once it really gets going, is absolutely a tale of buddy-bonding. This surprised and, ultimately, delighted me. It helps give the protagonist a bit more of a human side. And the team problem-solving scenes are, again, pitch-perfect. 4. Project Hail Mary puts the 'fiction' back in Science Fiction. In The Martian, leaving aside the opening wind storm and the closing chapter of wish-fulfillment heroics, we are essentially in a very tightly written NASA simulation. I found this incredibly enjoyable - but one could reasonably ask, where are the big ideas? Where are the bold 'what ifs'? The answer is, they're in Project Hail Mary! The science is still real and omni-present, but the fiction is big, bold, and awesome. If you're main draw for the Martian was the NASA lore and you wished Weir would write an even tighter sequel detailing the Apollo 13 events, you may be a bit disappointed - but everyone else is going to love this change of pace! So that's it in a nutshell: Project Hail Mary is a fantastic next book to read after The Martian. It's a clear spiritual successor but brings new ideas and structure to the game. Enjoy!
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Reviewed in the United States on February 16, 2025
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Joe Rak
Dallas, US
★★★★★ 4
Excellent Hard Sci-Fi… Until the Politics Pull You Out
Format: Kindle
I was really excited to dive into Project Hail Mary. As a longtime Isaac Asimov fan, I’ve been craving fresh, modern hard science fiction that actually respects the science. This book delivered — at least for a while. The author injects real science into the story in a way that’s both fun and fantastic. You don’t need to be an engineer to follow it; a solid high-school education is plenty. The concepts stretch your imagination without ever feeling impossible, and for the first chunk of the book I was hooked. I genuinely thought I’d found a new favorite author. Then the jarring interruptions started. Out of nowhere you get yanked out of the immersive sci-fi world by modern political pandering that feels completely unnecessary. A random parenthetical about Columbus “discovering an already inhabited world” when comparing something to the New World. Casual pronoun lectures. Characters selected or described by race and identity in ways that scream “check the boxes.” These moments don’t serve the story — they feel injected. Once you notice the author’s leanings, it becomes hard to unsee. Each time it happens, the fantasy evaporates. It takes several chapters to sink back into the story… only for the next micro-lecture to pull you right back out. Overall, I loved the writing, the hard science, and the imagination. It’s some of the best sci-fi I’ve read in years. I just wish the author had trusted the story instead of sneaking in real-world politics. It’s like eating the best meal of your life… and then finding a hair or two in it. Strongly recommended for the sci-fi, with the above caveat.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 17, 2026
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psusanh
Pawtucket, US
★★★★★ 5
Engrossing and Thought-Provoking
Format: Hardcover
This is an absolutely engrossing read in the first half of the book, especially--so much so that I actually canceled a social plan so that I could keep reading. The author shifts effortlessly across scenes and time--the play of past and present is very much part of the book's plot and insight--and I developed a fast curiosity and unsettling investment in understanding our anti-heroine/heroine Natalie. This surprised me, because had a friend not recommended the novel I never would have signed on to spend time in the head of a "tradwife." For me the novel was an imagined and imaginative provocation on American womanhood (and masculinity) in the 21st century, where no options or "performances" seem entirely satisfying or even real. I found it simultaneously disturbing and darkly humorous, especially in its depiction of young women's collegiate lives. However, readers should have some tolerance for caricature throughout. While I howled at the depictions of the miserable lives of aspiring "modern" women in the dorms and figuratively pounded my fists at the hypocrisy of the tradwife, I was also conscious of hyperbole and exaggeration--no, their lives aren't that bad; nor, I would guess, are the "tradwives" as bad as Natalie, who is a profoundly unlikable character. I did find that the novel bogged down in its middle and late-middle chapters--the mystery of what's happening to Natalie remains but the momentum seems to stall out into repetition. I also felt that the ending seemed too rushed and too tidy, given the nuance we see earlier in the novel. It ends with what feels like a reductive endorsement of modern (or post-modern) life for women when, earlier in the novel, we get to contemplate the flaws in ALL of the scripts and performances that women--and the hapless Caleb-- are asked to live by, or choose... Indeed, the characters that I would have loved to hear more from are the two who seemed more grounded and, ultimately, perhaps happier than the others: Natalie's sister and even her mother... The concluding exposition felt rushed, as did the analysis, in other words...Some of the religious scenes seemed tone-deaf to me... I'm not an evangelical, but Natalie's relationship to God strained credulity. **Highly recommend** this to anyone looking for a provocative and engrossing read on women's lives and constraints in the age of social media that engages in a fascinating thought experiment along the way...
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Reviewed in the United States on May 26, 2026
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Minifan
Omaha, US
★★★★★ 4
An unexpected reading experience!
Format: Hardcover
Very unexpected novel! I went into it without any knowledge or prior information of what it was going to be about. Main character is not a person you would want to be friends. So when calamities happen to her it was hard for me to muster up much sympathy or compassion. It was more of “you had this coming, you deserve every miserable minute”. And boy, there were many! Some harder to believe than others. As I was reading, I first thought- I don’t want to keep this book, it’s not worth saving. But it developed to be definitely the type of story that sticks in your mind, you find yourself revisiting parts and characters and wondering why that happened and why did that person react a certain way. And to me that’s a book worth reading and keeping on my limited bookshelf. So I changed my opinion as I read to the end of the novel. It is certainly a book worthy of a neighborhood book group discussion. I am recommending and sharing my copy to family members and reading friends.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 20, 2026
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Cheryl R💎
Port Orchard, US
★★★★★ 5
Beneath the perfect surface
Format: Kindle
Yesteryear completely caught me off guard in the best possible way. What begins as a fascinating look into social media influence, curated perfection, and historical living slowly unfolds into something far deeper and far more emotional than I expected. The storytelling was incredibly well done, especially the way the author balanced the polished modern influencer world against the harsh realities of 1800s frontier life. The transitions between timelines and perspectives were seamless, and by the end, every piece fit together in a way that completely redefined the story. What made this especially compelling for me was how layered Natalie’s character felt. Her upbringing, family expectations, faith, public image, and the pressure to maintain perfection all shaped the choices she made throughout the story. Rather than feeling one-dimensional, she felt like someone slowly buckling under the weight of everything she believed she was supposed to be. The emotional impact of this book surprised me. Beneath the historical elements and social media commentary is a story about identity, appearances, family, and the toll that constant performance can take on a person and those around them. This is one of those books where the less you know going in, the better the experience will be. I expected an entertaining premise, but I ended up with a story that lingered long after I finished the final page.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 28, 2026

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