Summary[edit] Description: English: Dudleya pulverulenta. A cultivated specimen at the visitors center at San Elijo Lagoon Ecological Reserve in Cardiff, California, USA. Date: 6 June 2009. Source: Own work. Author: Stickpen. Permission(Reusing this file): released to public domain.
Summary[edit] Description: English: Botanical specimen in the San Luis Obispo Botanical Garden - in El Chorro Regional Park, San Luis Obispo, California, USA. Date: 16 November 2013, 20:11:16. Source: Own work. Author: Daderot.
Summary[edit] Description: English: Botanical specimen in the Regional Parks Botanic Garden, Berkeley, California, USA. Date: 14 November 2013, 19:37:53. Source: Own work. Author: Daderot.
Summary[edit] Description: Native to southern California and northern Baja California. San Diego Botanical Gardens. Date: 27 June 2007, 03:59. Source: Dudleya pulverulenta-- the Chalk Dudleya. Author: Dick Culbert from Gibsons, B.C., Canada.
Dudleya pulverulenta—chalk dudleya. A large, distinctive Dudleya with a range of over 1,000 km from southern Monterey County to nearly mid-peninsula Baja California. The grayish, chalky (or farinose) covering that gives the species its common name protects it from temperature extremes. The red flowers are a favorite of hummingbirds when in bloom. It is a cliff-dweller in nature and those attempting to grow the plant in gardens are advised to plant it in a more-or-less perpendicular position, as shown in this photo. Photographed at Regional Parks Botanic Garden located in Tilden Regional Park near Berkeley, CA.
Summary[edit] Description: English: Botanical specimen in Leaning Pine Arboretum, California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo, California, USA. Date: 16 November 2013, 18:12:11. Source: Own work. Author: Daderot.
Dudleya pulverulenta—chalk dudleya. A large, distinctive Dudleya with a range of over 1,000 km from southern Monterey County to nearly mid-peninsula Baja California. The grayish, chalky (or farinose) covering that gives the species its common name protects it from temperature extremes. The red flowers are a favorite of hummingbirds when in bloom. It is a cliff-dweller in nature and those attempting to grow the plant in gardens are advised to plant it in a more-or-less perpendicular position. Photographed at Regional Parks Botanic Garden located in Tilden Regional Park near Berkeley, CA.