Our neighbor, Tim, brought us this Ocotillo a few years back. Since being transplanted here, it has flourished in our backyard. This spring, it has a very showy coat of fine green leaves. The flowers at the tips of the canes haven’t started blooming yet, but they likely will do so this summer.
More about Fouquieria splendens:
These peculiar desert plants bring a sense of wonder to the arid landscapes they thrive in with their distinctive and stunning appearance. They are popular in xeriscape gardens and can be found in many commercial landscaping designs in regions with warm, dry climates. Plants are sometimes grown in medicinal gardens for their healing properties.
Ocotillo may appear to be a cactus because of its spiny branches, but this is a flowering desert shrub. When in flower, the vivid reddish-orange blossoms become heavy, tipping the branches and making for a striking display. Pollinators enjoy the nectar and the blooms are like magnets, drawing hummingbirds and flying insects to them when in bloom. If you’re interested in adding more resilient, unique, and pollinator-friendly plant species to your water-wise garden or landscape, ocotillo is an excellent choice!
(From Gardeners Path)
I don’t recall the color of the flowers but do remember they were nice. There was a good amount of ocotillo growing west of Calexico, CA when I was stationed there in the Border Patrol. In fact there was a town by that name about 30 miles west of Calexico.
Hi Glenn – The flowers are red-orange and appear at the tops of the canes. We’ll post pictures when they show up this season.
We knew about the town of Ocotillo. Drove by it on I-8 some years back.