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  2. Here's the Ultimate Aloe Vera Plant Care Guide for New Plant ...

    www.aol.com/step-step-video-easily-repot...

    From watering every two weeks after the soil goes dry to bright light, learn the best way to care for aloe vera, Plus, learn its benefits for skin and hair.

  3. How to Repot Aloe Vera Plants Properly in 8 Simple Steps - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/repot-aloe-vera-plants...

    The plant grows more slowly in a tight space and nearly stops growing when its roots fill the pot. ... Aloes need lots of bright light, so placing the repotted aloe plant near a south-facing ...

  4. Gonialoe variegata - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gonialoe_variegata

    Each leaf is a rich green colour with irregular light green banding made up of amalgamated, slightly raised oval spots, and similarly light coloured fine serrations along each edge. In mature plants the outer, and thus oldest, leaves are 10–15 cm long and approximately 3–6 cm broad at the base.

  5. Aloe lateritia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aloe_lateritia

    Aloe lateritia is an acaulescent, succulent Aloe species. Its glossy leaves are light green, becoming brown-green in the sun. The leaves have thin white margins, and are covered in pale spots and patches. The underside of the leaves have much fewer, paler and more blurred spots.

  6. Aloe ambigens - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aloe_ambigens

    Stem aloe that grows slowly to about 40 cm. [3] Leaves a green teal color, and it grows rosettes on stems. They rarely offset making propagation of this rarity hard. The leaves are at first distichous meaning they grow in rows, one opposite of other..

  7. How to Care for an Aloe Plant (aka the Easy, Breezy ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/care-aloe-plant-aka-easy-170000878.html

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  8. Aloe thraskii - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aloe_thraskii

    The dune aloe is a tall, fast-growing, un-branched aloe, which develops a very large rosette. The long, pale, grey-green leaves are deeply grooved or channeled (U-shaped in cross-section) and recurve downwards. The orange and yellow flowers grow in short, compact, cylindrical racemes, on multi-branched inflorescences. [2]

  9. Aloe excelsa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aloe_excelsa

    The leaves form a compact rosette at the top, spreading becoming recurved and up to 1 metre long. They are dark green in summer and succulent, up to 3 cm thick at the centre. Similar to some other aloe species, young plants have a great number of spines over their leaf surfaces.