
Growing Aloe Vera Plants: Watering, Lighting, Repotting, Use, and More!
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Especially attractive Aloe include:
- Tiger or Partridge-Breasted Aloe (Aloe variegata) – A compact aloe characterized by short, smooth leaves with uneven white stripes.
- Lace Aloe (A. aristata) – A small plant with white-spotted, finely sawtoothed leaves.
- Blue Aloe (A. glauca) – A larger aloe species with silver-blue leaves.
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This is a common outcome, and rather than repeat the advice we have given again, pls search this page for “brown” and you will see several responses from us, including the one immediately below.
Please help
Hi this is Elisa again. I saw that my neighbor had an aloe vera plant. Healthy looking, plump, green. But I also noticed that there were egg scraps on top of it? Can I do the same thing cause my aloe vera plant is very small and brown. The tips are drying up as well. Also I planted my aloe in my garden under some plants. It is no longer in a pot and I found some bugs in the soil.
Hi Elisa,
Once you plant something outside, it’s open to all of the pests and diseases in the soil. Did the drying happen after you transplanted? It could be caused by stress from the move. Yes, egg scraps are good for keeping insect pests away: Crumble the shells into small pieces and sprinkle them around the base of the aloe plant in the soil.
Hi I have 4 Aloe Vera plants and I thought I was taking good care of them. But recently a lead on 2 of my plants are wilted and dried up? I have been cautious to not over water only once a week for fear of root rot but is that not enough? The rest of the plant is bright green and full looking and the leaves that have turned brown on me and wilted are small ones at the base. All 4 plants appear healthy and green and very plump looking. Just want to keep them healthy and could use some advice on their care such as should I feed them plant food also?
Hi Tim,
Since the leaves that wilted were ones on the outside, it sounds like they could just be old ones. As long as the rest of the plants look healthy, it would be better to not change how you care for them.
I bought an aloe plant today because I burned my finger and wanted some aloe gel to put on it, and because I liked the idea of being able to have access to aloe going into the future. I was in a hurry to bandage my burn and use the aloe so I didn't do research on how to harvest the gel first. I just cut the tip off one of the leaves and squeezed out the gel like it was a tube of toothpaste. Will this sort of treatment harm the plant? The leaves are pretty big so there's no way I would need a full one to treat my small burn. So doing it this way works better for me, but I don't want to hurt the plant.
Also, it seems a lot of the soil fell out of the pot prior to my buying it. When I pick up the pot and move it (like from one surface to another) the whole plant wobbles because there is so much empty space in the pot. I will not be able to get to the store for more soil for about another week. Do you think the plant can survive as-is that long?
I have an old aloe vera that was so large and heavy it toppled over in the pot and now has a new generation of aloe veras. I want to trim the old plant but do not want to destroy the leaves. Can I cut them and freeze them to preserve them for future use?
Hi, I just got a 2 aloe vera plants from my friend. However, I didn't have any soil so it stayed in my room for a while and now, its brownish in colour. I've planted my aloe Vera's but I used a professional seed raising soil which said it holds extra water. I can't buy a new soil or sand to mix it in. Would it be alright? And also it's the last month of Winter so would I have to bring it in my room? And my aloe vera is in a pot which looks much TOO big for it. I would really appreciate some answers. Thanks
Hi Elisa,
It sounds like the plants have gone through a couple of different shocks: First they didn’t get any water or soil, and then they were planted outside and watered plenty. They might not come back, but the best thing to do would be to let their soil dry out to a depth of about 1 inch. Water sparingly. Also, this advice depends on where you are located. Here it is currently the middle of summer.