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pot for aloe vera plant

pot for aloe vera plant Buy Aloe Vera Yellow Phoenix, AZ | Aloe barbadensis

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pot for aloe vera plant 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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Julie W. Capell
Battle Creek, US
★★★★★ 5
Must read before walking the Camino
Format: Kindle
Beautiful, thoughtful account of the many ways walking the Camino can challenge us and help us grow. By far the best of the Camino books I read.
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Reviewed in the United States on October 16, 2025
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Mountain Rose
West Palm Beach, US
★★★★★ 3
Not a bad first-person account
Format: Paperback
I had mixed thoughts about this book. It's the author's personal experiences and thoughts about the Camino, but aren't most books about the Camino? I tend to think it's a little too much interior maundering, how every part of the experience affected the writer. Still, what would you expect? I have to call this just an ok read. Most of the reason I liked it at all is because I am intrigued by the Camino and enjoy reading about it. The writer is a dedicated sister and her companion was a retired priest. I enjoyed the places where she touched on Catholicism, but there wasn't much of that. But there was the part of the book that I found a jarring note, and that was about her take on some fellow Catholics. She and her companion meet a group of three helpful, warm, caring priests and take them to be Jesuits. The priests inform them that that are Opus Dei. As the sister and priest continue walking, they find they are both astounded at the goodness of these men, since Opus Dei is considered to be extremely wealthy, conservative, and have strong ties to traditional Rome. (I thought all Catholics felt they have ties to Rome. I myself talk about the year I "crossed the Tiber.") It is just amazing to this twosome that such nice men could be from wealthy, conservative Opus Dei. I thought this antipathy toward a Catholic group known to do good works told a lot more about the writer than about the well-met priests--maybe more than she intended to let slide about herself. It was the one part of the book that struck a negative note for me. Other than that, I also wished for more at the end. They finished the Camino and went on to Finisterre. (Huh? What happened to the time spent at the Cathedral at the end? The beauty of the place and the experience of Mass there, and that wonderful incense burner. That whole part was left out.) I finished the book and consider it just "ok".
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Reviewed in the United States on November 30, 2021
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E. Lingle
Grantham, US
★★★★★ 5
Been on the Camino and love this book
Format: Paperback
I am a Joyce Rupp fan. I'd always dreamt of doing the Camino some day, and when I saw that Joyce had done it, and written a book about it, I quickly bought it and read it. Her book gave me the courage to buy a plane ticket and go. I'm a hiker and camper. I could tell from reading her book that some of the facets of the hike- some of the albergues, some of the pilgrims, some of the food-- etc etc-- were perhaps harder for her to accept than they would be for me. I thought she gave a really honest appraisal of how things were for her, and was touched by how she eventually resolved some of those contretemps. I recently was looking at reviews of the book and was surprised to see some of the negative reviews. What I got from reading Joyce's book was an honest look at the Camino from the eyes of a middle-aged woman used to her own personal space, solitude, food, level of cleanliness, etc. One does necessarily give a lot of that up when on the Camino, if you stay in the albergues! They are fabulous places for meeting people from all over the world- but they can make you cringe if you are not used to hearing snoring at night. What I love about this book is the life lessons, her thoughts on what she found there, and what she got out of it in spite of -- and maybe even because of her discomfort. I recommend this book for mature people thinking of hiking the Camino. In 2011 I accompanied a women's group from my church from Samos to Santiago, and I asked them all to read the book-- they liked it, too.
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Reviewed in the United States on August 22, 2013
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Erik Olson
New York, US
★★★★★ 5
A Pilgrimage Of Body and Spirit
Format: Paperback
Back in the summer of 2003, I visited a former seminary roommate in Leon, Spain. I showed up a couple of days before his wedding after backpacking through Amsterdam, Paris, London, and Madrid. While strolling together through Leon, my Spanish friend remarked that people thought I was a "Pilgrim" because of my clothing and backpack. I asked him to clarify, and he replied that Leon was on the path of the Camino Pilgrimage. Thus began my interest in the topic. "Walk in a Relaxed Manner" was the first book I read about the Camino. It's newly published, written by a 60-year-old nun who walked the Pilgrimage around the time I was in Leon. She hit the trail with a retired priest, and this book was born from that experience. The subtitle and theme is "Life Lessons From the Camino," and each chapter is based on a way she grew due to the Pilgrimage. For example, the book's title is shared with a chapter where Sr. Rupp describes how she learned to walk slowly and thoughtfully instead of quickly and competitively. Other chapter titles include "Savor Solitude," "Deal with Disappointments," and "Live in the Now." Such topics may strike some as trite. But I found it impressive that more often than not, it was the walk's difficulties that enabled her to internalize these truths. The author writes in a clear and readable manner. She rejoices in the high points of the Pilgrimage, and is honest about the lows as well. Each lesson is presented in a thoughtful manner, and all are applicable to everyday life. However, like many spiritual insights perhaps some sort of defining experience is required to truly own them. But reading about these truths may be a way to prepare the heart for their eventual actualization. Although a Catholic nun in the Servite Community, Sr. Rupp keeps things fairly ecumenical throughout her tale. In addition, practical advice about the Pilgrimage is sprinkled throughout the book, and a list of helpful Camino resources is included at the end. There's even an authorized website based on Joyce Rupp's name if you want more info about her. Someday I'd like to do the El Camino Pilgrimage. I hope I don't have to wait until my sixties, but sometimes you have to let things happen in their time. If I do walk it, I'll be glad if I learn and grow half as much as Sr. Rupp did. Recommended for all travelers and pilgrims. UPDATE 9/7/07: Well, I only had to wait until I was forty to do the Camino. On 7/14/07 I stepped off in St. Jean Pied-de-Port (France), and on 8/24/07 I walked into Santiago, Spain. After returning home to the US, I went through this book again. It was nice reading about familiar places on the Way, and also to identify with the lessons Ms. Rupp writes about. Recommended even more now that I've actually done the trek.
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Reviewed in the United States on December 29, 2005
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Optymizer
Lowell, US
★★★★★ 5
This book is the real deal
Format: Paperback
This book is the real deal. I found it to be eye-opening, because, despite sounding very advanced and almost next-level, the attacks accompanied by source code show how simple and effective they are in reality. This book seemed light at first (200 pages), so I was skeptical at it's ability to really tackle advanced topics, but I will say I was very pleasantly surprised. Those two hundred pages are action packed and filled with jaw-dropping 'this is cool' moments. My only gripe with it is that it's a little formulaic, with the social engineering being shoehorned into every attack, and maybe pushing the whole APT thing too much, like when you really want something to become 'a thing'. Do we really need to socially engineer payloads using the same formula for all of the attacks? Not even one 'ha Ked the router with boring Cisco exploits' example? I guess it wouldn't make for an entertaining book.
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Reviewed in the United States on August 23, 2018

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