Houzz Logo Print
suzannejparkes

Is this a bromeliad?

2 years ago

A friend has recently offered me a pup from a plant growing in her garden, but neither of us knows what it is and I haven't seen it in person yet. Based on some image searches I think it might be some kind of bromeliad but I'm really not sure, any ideas?

Comments (17)

  • 2 years ago


    Not the greatest picture unfortunately

  • 2 years ago

    Likely to be a Tillandsia. Of which there are many kinds.

  • 2 years ago

    Are there teeth on those leaves? Where is it growing?

    tj

  • PRO
    2 years ago

    It looks like SILVER EDGE MONDO GRASS

  • 2 years ago

    So many it might be. See if Tillandsia magnusiana fits.

    tj

  • 2 years ago

    @tsugajunkie z5 SE WI ♱ it does have teeth and I believe it's out in full sunlight

  • 2 years ago

    Since it has teeth, look up Dyckia choristaminea and see if that's a match.

  • 2 years ago

    Suzanne,


    Where are you located? It looks like a fallen tillandsia (which usually grow on trees). Did you plant this or it just appeared in its current location? If it is a tillandsia, it won't be growing in the ground (usually has no roots to speak of).


    I picked one up in Florida (Orlando area) years ago that had fallen from a tree at the hotel I was staying at. I suppose the ground gets littered with them after a storm.




    Some I purchased later that year at an arts and crafts show. Common name is "air plants" and that becomes obvious when you see them growing without soil (which will kill them eventually)


    This is what they do in the tropics (mid-Feb, 2006 in Belize)




    Same trip - this is at Tikal, Guatemala. The tree with the red fuzz is full of Tillandsia




  • 2 years ago

    @hc mcdole I'm located in Buckinghamshire. Unfortunately I don't have too many details as it belongs in a friends garden but she doesn't seem to know much about it, she originally thought it might be some kind of aloe. I see a few people suggesting it might be a tillandsia of some kind but from what I can see online tillandsia don't usually have teeth?


    I'll probably update this post once she passes a pup on to me so I can get some clearer closer images.


    Everyone's been really helpful so far, so thank you all!

  • 2 years ago

    I think a terrestrial bromeliad (eg Dyckia, Puya) is more likely than Tillandsia based on the teeth and how it's growing. Puya mirabilis would be another one with that grassy look.

  • 2 years ago

    Close up pics and checking for roots will help. I don't know if Puya or Dyckia (or Tillandsia for that matter) are hardy in Buckinghamshire. I cannot see any teeth on the plant either - maybe my screen is too small. I doubled the size of the image (200%) and still cannot see any indication of teeth.


  • 2 years ago

    I thought I saw teeth, knowing it does has me thinking Puya laxa. It is hardy down to -10C (15F).

    tj

  • 2 years ago

    I can see teeth as well, but I can only enlarge the photo enough to see them on my phone. I'm not familiar with minimum winter temps in Buckinghamshire, but Puya dyckioides is another relatively cold hardy species (10F). And I have a Puya sp that I saw happily growing outside in a garden in NC zone 7b (5F). This one doesn't look fuzzy enough to me to be P laxa, although I agree that closer in photos would help and there may be forms with less dense trichromes.

  • 2 years ago

    Knowing you are in Bucks makes a huge difference. If the plant has overwintered in your friend’s garden it is unlikely to be a Tillandsia.


    It might be Fascicularia bicolor which can survive in sheltered gardens in the south.


    Btw I see teeth.

  • last year

    Are there tillandsias in the trees above?

  • last year
    last modified: last year

    No chance. OP lives in Buckinghamshire, UK. There are few Bromeliads even marginally hardy outdoors here and none on trees. Possibly a house plant put outside by someone who didn't know this, or who likes a challenge.


    I have Billbergia nutans in a pot which survives outdoors but it winters under a bush in a town garden. And it doesn't have thin silver leaves.

Sponsored
Grow Landscapes
Average rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars8 Reviews
Planning Your Outdoor Space in Loundon County?