Aloe barberae

    Botanical name

    Aloe barberae

    Other names

    Aloe bainesii; boomaalwyn (Afrikaans)

    Family

    Asphodelaceae

    Dimensions

    Much-branched trees with prominent trunks, often over 15 m; tallest of the SA aloes

    Description of stem

    Can be over 2,5 m in diameter, usually with a broad 'foot' at ground level; bark even, grey-brown with a sandpapery roughness

    Description of leaves

    Dark green, smooth, recurving and longitudinally channelled; can be over a meter long on young plants, shorter on old trees; light-coloured edges with small teeth on the edges (only)

    Description of flowers

    Comparatively small and inconspicuous panicles of pinkish to orange flowers from May to August

    Description of seed/fruit

    Large green capsules

    Description of roots

     

    Variation

     

    Propagation and cultivation

    Grows easily from truncheons in different soil types; any stem with a rosette is likely to grow if planted in well-drained soil; the rosette is sometimes removed from a stem to induce the growth of multiple new branches, rosettes sprouting from the surface of the stem; once these are strong they are removed for transplanting

    Tolerances

    Not very drought or frost resistant

    Uses

    Sought after garden plant; becoming very common in parks and bigger gardens, fast-growing

    Ecological rarity

    Common, not threatened

    Pests and diseases

     

    Other

     

    Location

    Forest and coastal bush areas in warm and higher rainfall (above 750 mm p.a.) areas

    Distribution (SA provinces)

    Eastern Cape, KwaZulu-Natal and Mpumalanga

    Country

    South Africa, Swaziland and Mozambique

     


     

    Aloe barberae in Gauteng; Photographed by Jack Latti

    Fork in stem of Aloe barberae - Photograph by Johannes Vogel