Photo of Agave geminiflora form by Cistus Nursery

Photo by Cistus Nursery

Used with permission, all rights reserved

Show all photos

Agave geminiflora

Also Known As

  • Agave angustissima
  • Bonapartea flagelliformis
  • Bonapartea juncea
  • Dracaena boscii
  • Littaea geminiflora
  • Yucca boscii
  • Twin-flowered Agave

Plant type

cactus / succulent

size

  • H: 1'-3'
  • W: 2'-4'

planting zones

  • 9a-12

More Options

Agave geminiflora plant details

An architectural focal point of a plant, a spiky ball of long, skinny, spineless, filament-edged leaves with sharp pointed tips. In sun, the leaves are rigid. With more shade, which it tolerates better than most agaves, the leaves take on a slightly softer droop. A statement piece in the garden, either way. It cannot survive wet feet and likes to be dry in winter, so it's best planted in a container or somewhere with perfect drainage. It will happily grow indoors short term or long. After 10 or more years, it sends up a 10 foot tall flower spike for a final hurrah before dying.

Agave geminiflora is an evergreen cactus / succulent with green foliage. Features grassy texture. Grows well with sun - mostly sun and occasional - low water. Drought tolerant once established. Prefers to be dry in winter. Does well in average, gritty, lean, rocky and well-drained soil. A good option if you're seeking something heat tolerant and verticillium wilt resistant.

CHARACTERISTICS OF Agave geminiflora

Plant type: cactus / succulent
Plant family: agavaceae, asparagaceae
Foliage: evergreen green
Mature size: 2 FT - 4 FT - wide, 1 FT - 3 FT - tall
Uses: architectural, container plant, desert garden, houseplant, infrequent-blooming, monocarpic, rare, rock garden, rosette-forming, spiky, tropical-looking, xeric

GROWING CONDITIONS for Agave geminiflora

USDA Zones: 9a - 12
Sun exposure: sun - mostly sun
Watering frequency: occasional - low
Resistant to: deer and rabbit, heat and verticillium wilt
Soil needs: average, gritty, lean, rocky and well-drained

Nursery contributed plant descriptions

Agave geminiflora displays dense rosettes of narrow, flexible, dark green foliage on a short central stem. Ideal in landscapes and containers or can adapt as a houseplant. Provide a well-drained soil away from reflected heat. Once established, water infrequently during the hot season. Protect your PRINCE OF PARADISE™ from frost!
A rare relative in the Agave filifera group, this southwestern Mexico native has intriguing deep green rosettes of rubbery, somewhat weeping leaves with enchanting silver-white filifers toward the center of the rosette. Can even produce a short trunk. A tender species damaged under about 20F, USDA zone 9, it is best in a tall pot where its weeping foliage can spread out and over the rim. When the plants reach 1 ft. or more in diameter, they produce a spike of flowers well over 5 ft tall at which time, hopefully, they also produce an offset or two. Frost hardy in USDA zone 9, these are tender and damaged under 20F.
A thin leafed agave with sharp points and a nice, symmetrical rosette with many leaves. Margins have white, papery edge with curly white threads. Up to 2 foot diameter.
Partial Shade to Full Sun. Outdoor. Yellow Flowers w/ a hint of Red on a 8-12' spike.

By: Moon - Sun Cactus & Koi Gardens

A dense dwarf agave with dark green fine narrow foliage which has white markings and recurving filaments producing a softly textured effect. Excellent for container gardens, rock gardens, or perennial borders. Mature plants produce tall dense spikes of the small greenish-yellow flowers that are borne in pairs. Item# 9325.
Though it was described and named back in 1817 from a plant cultivated in Europe, the native habitat of Agave geminiflora was long unknown until it was found in the Mexican state of Nayarit in 1951. More recently, plants have also been found in the neighboring state of Jalisco, to the northwest of Guadalajara. Its native habitat is open oak woodland. Though rare in nature, it does very well in cultivation and is widely grown for its decorative “spike-ball” appearance, often enhanced by white curling fibers peeling from the margins of the leaves. In nature Agave geminiflora is typically found as a single rosette which dies after blooming, but in cultivation it may sprout new shoots from among the leaves after it has flowered, forming a clump. While the leaves of some agaves start to wither even as they are flowering, those of A. geminiflora can stay green for a long time afterward. If new shoots are produced around the base of the stalk, this may not happen for a year or two. The leaves of this species are 1½ to 2 feet long (45 to 60 cm), but only about ¼ inch across (7 mm) in the lower part of the blade, narrowing upward and sharp at the tip. In many specimens white thread-like fibers curl from the edges of the leaves, creating an ornamental effect, but sometimes these are absent. The rigidity of the leaves is also variable; in some plants they radiate out stiffly from the center, while in others they are more flaccid. Many Agave species flower in summer, but Agave geminiflora blooms in the fall, with its stalk rising to a height of 12 to 18 feet (up to nearly 6 m). Like other members of the subgenus Littaea, it has no floral branches, so that the flowers sprout directly from the stalk. The stalk is quite stout, with a diameter of 3½ inches or more (9 – 12 cm), and the flowers are borne in pairs along the greater part of its length. The paired flowers are the source of its name, since “geminiflora” means twin-flowered. The buds are a dark purple color, and the mature flowers have an underlying green color on the outside, tinted purple (especially toward the tips). When the flowers open, the petal tips curl back to reveal the pale yellow or white (or greenish-white) face of the flower, sometimes tinged with pink or purple. The stigma and filaments are purple or reddish-purple, with the large anthers bearing pale yellow pollen.
Very narrow terrete leaves make this sculptural agave look like a sea urchin. Dry in winter.

Gardening facts about Agave geminiflora plant

How to Grow Agave geminiflora

  • Sun Exposure

    • sun - mostly sun
  • Water Needs

    • occasional - drought tolerant
  • Water Needs

    • dry in winter
  • Soil Needs

    • average
    • lean
    • well-drained
    • rocky
    • gritty
  • Special Situation

    • heat tolerant
    • verticillium wilt resistant

Features

  • Foliage Color

    • green
  • Wildlife

    • deer resistant
    • rabbit resistant
  • Foliage Season

    • evergreen
  • Texture

    • grassy
Mailing List
Sign Up for updates on new plant arrivals and deals

© 2010—2024 Plant Lust, LLC All Rights Reserved