dracaena draco flower Buy Dracaena draco Dragon's Blood Tree
SKU: 51801232814
dracaena draco flower

dracaena draco flower Buy Dracaena draco Dragon's Blood Tree

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Description

dracaena draco flower Buy Dracaena draco Dragon's Blood TreeDragon's Blood Tree Botanical Name: Dracaena draco Family: Asparagaceae Origin: Canary Islands, Madeira and Cape Verde (rocky, arid coastal landscapes) Plant Type: Evergreen tree architectural feature plant Overview One of the most extraordinary and ancient looking trees in the plant world, Dracaena draco is a plant of genuine mythology and spectacle. Its common name comes from the deep red resin called dragon's blood that oozes from the bark and

Dragon's Blood Tree

Botanical Name: Dracaena draco
Family: Asparagaceae
Origin: Canary Islands, Madeira and Cape Verde (rocky, arid coastal landscapes)
Plant Type: Evergreen tree / architectural feature plant

Overview

One of the most extraordinary and ancient-looking trees in the plant world, Dracaena draco is a plant of genuine mythology and spectacle. Its common name comes from the deep red resin — called dragon's blood — that oozes from the bark and stems when cut, a characteristic so remarkable that ancient cultures used it in medicine, dye and varnish for centuries. The tree itself is equally extraordinary: a slow-growing, supremely architectural evergreen that develops over decades from a single-stemmed rosette into a dramatic umbrella-shaped canopy of stout branches, each terminating in a dense rosette of long, stiff, blue-green sword-shaped leaves.
An RHS Award of Garden Merit recipient, Dracaena draco is perfectly suited to Adelaide's warm, dry Mediterranean climate. It thrives in full sun, tolerates drought, coastal salt winds and poor soils with complete ease, and is simply one of the most impressive long-term garden investment plants available. Exceptionally long-lived — some wild specimens are estimated to be several hundred to over a thousand years old — this is a tree that will outlast the garden and everyone in it. Buy the largest specimen you can afford and let time do the rest.

Key Features

  • Mature Size: 4–8 m H x 3–5 m W in Adelaide garden conditions over many decades; develops a dramatic flat-topped umbrella canopy with age; young plants are single-stemmed rosettes for many years before branching begins
  • Growth Rate: Very slow; approximately 5–10 cm per year in early years, somewhat faster once established in warm conditions; branching begins only after first flowering, which may take 10–15+ years; buy advanced stock for the best impact
  • Foliage: Long, stiff, sword-shaped blue-green to grey-green succulent leaves arranged in dense terminal rosettes at branch tips; each leaf 40–60 cm long; leaves shed slowly from the base as the plant grows, revealing clean, ringed stems; evergreen year-round; red resinous sap ("dragon's blood") exudes from any wound to the bark or stems
  • Flowers: Spectacular large terminal spikes of fragrant creamy-white to greenish-white flowers on mature specimens; produced irregularly — flowering triggers the first branching of the trunk, which is a landmark event in the plant's development; followed by round, fleshy orange-red fruits attractive to birds
  • Fragrance: Flowers fragrant; foliage not fragrant
  • Seasonal Interest: Bold architectural blue-green rosette form year-round; extraordinary umbrella canopy develops over many years; rare and spectacular flowering spikes on mature specimens trigger trunk branching; orange-red fruits follow flowering; the plant becomes more architecturally magnificent with every passing decade
  • Wildlife Value: Fragrant flowers attract bees and beneficial insects; orange-red fruits attract fruit-eating birds; branching canopy provides perching and shelter
  • Tolerance: Excellent drought tolerance once established; excellent heat tolerance; outstanding coastal and frontline salt spray tolerance; wind-tolerant; frost-sensitive — protect from frost, especially when young; tolerates poor, sandy, rocky and low-fertility soils; dislikes waterlogging; dislikes humid tropical climates
  • Planting Density: Single feature specimen with 3–4 m clearance to allow full canopy development; groups of 3 at 2.5–3.0 m spacing for a dramatic grove; excellent in large containers (50 cm+) for many years
  • Pet Friendly: Toxic to cats and dogs if ingested — keep away from pets

Where It Works Best

  • Sunlight: Full sun; essential for best growth, most compact rosette form and overall plant health; tolerates bright indirect light in containers; light afternoon shade protection in Adelaide's hottest inland positions may benefit young plants
  • Soil: Free-draining sandy, loamy or gravelly soils; excellent drainage is non-negotiable — will not tolerate wet feet or waterlogging; tolerates poor, rocky and low-fertility soils; avoid heavy clay without significant improvement
  • Water Needs: Establishment: water well every 1–2 weeks for first 6–12 months. Established: very low; deep soak every 3–4 weeks in summer; little to no watering in cooler months; one of the most drought-adapted specimen trees available for Adelaide
  • Maintenance: Virtually maintenance-free; remove spent flower spikes and dead lower leaves as needed; do not prune the growing tips or terminal rosettes; feed sparingly with a slow-release fertiliser in spring; apply coarse gravel mulch around the base; the tree essentially looks after itself once established
  • Lifespan: Exceptionally long-lived; centuries in ideal conditions; this is a generational garden investment
  • Climate Zones: Near-perfect match for Adelaide's Mediterranean climate; performs excellently across Adelaide Plains, coastal suburbs, Fleurieu Peninsula and Yorke Peninsula; protect young plants from frost in cooler foothills positions; one of the most climate-suited exotic specimen trees for SA
  • Soil pH: Slightly acidic to neutral preferred; tolerates mildly alkaline conditions with good drainage

Landscape & Design Ideas

  • Iconic long-term feature specimen for large gardens, commercial landscapes and public spaces where its extraordinary architectural development over decades creates an ever-more-impressive focal point
  • Frontline coastal garden specimen where outstanding salt spray, wind and drought tolerance make it one of the most reliable large feature plants for exposed SA coastal positions
  • Contemporary, Mediterranean and arid-style garden centrepiece paired with Agave, Aloe, ornamental grasses and gravel mulch for a bold, low-water sculptural composition
  • Large container specimen for sheltered courtyards, rooftop gardens and commercial entrances where the bold rosette form delivers instant architectural drama at any age
  • Avenue or grove planting in groups of 3 or 5 for commercial landscapes and large residential gardens where the developing umbrella canopies will create a genuinely unforgettable long-term display

Why You Will Love It

Dracaena draco is not a plant for the impatient — but it is absolutely a plant for anyone who thinks in decades and wants a garden feature that will only get more extraordinary with time. The blue-green rosette form is striking from day one, the coastal and drought toughness is outstanding, and the slow, magnificent development of the umbrella canopy over the years is one of gardening's great long-game rewards. Buy advanced stock, plant it in full sun with perfect drainage, and let it become the centrepiece your Adelaide garden deserves.

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SKU: 51801232814

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Diana Lundstrom
Birmingham, US
★★★★★ 5
I would anyone to get it
Format: Hardcover
It was a good book
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Reviewed in the United States on June 6, 2026
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Chris Pavlovic
Dallas, US
★★★★★ 5
Outstanding book!
Format: Paperback
“How we think about our suffering matters. How we situate our suffering in God’s larger story matters.” (p. 189) This is an incredible resource not only for those walking through suffering, but also for anyone supporting a loved one in a difficult season. The authors offer a Biblical perspective that reframes how we approach suffering, bringing great hope and purpose without ever minimizing or over-simplifying our difficult journeys or relying on shallow platitudes. This book digs much deeper into the “contours of the meaning God provides for our suffering.” The authors give many practical, immediately applicable tools for navigating hard seasons and new insights about meaning-making. I learned so much from this book, and throughout it I felt the compassion of the Lord (and the authors) reaching off the page. What an encouragement to remember that our Lord Jesus has entered into our pain, never leaves us alone in it, and often draws us into a deeper walk with Him through suffering than we might experience in easier seasons. I will gladly recommend this book to friends and family!
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Reviewed in the United States on May 24, 2026
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Karen R.
Carnegie, US
★★★★★ 5
A must-read for all couples no matter how long (or little) they've been together!
I'm not all that big on self-help books, although I've also read some of Dr. Gray's Mars/Venus books to help me better understand how and why men and women are so different, and to embrace those differences and re-learn communication and conflict-resolution skills. This book by Dr. Chapman is entirely different and just as effective, in a different way. My boyfriend's son had sent it to him a year before we met, when he (my BF) and his wife were about to split up, hoping that it might help and maybe they'd reconcile. My BF read it cover-to-cover, loved it, learned from it, and, while it didn't save his marriage (his wife was leaving him for her new boyfriend no matter what), he highly recommended it to me and I bought it the next day. Wow, am I glad I did! It's an easy read and makes so much sense. We all have our own "love language" - and if our partner doesn't know it, and expresses his/her love a different way, it may not be the way that we need (and vice versa). My love language is Words of Affirmation (there are 5 major languages, and we all have one primary language that our partner should learn, and we should learn our partner’s). So when he tells me how much he appreciates me, loves me, tells me I look pretty, what a great mom I am, whatever, I positively glow. He also *shows* his love in so many ways, not just with words, so even if he doesn't say it, he shows it, and I appreciate him so much for that (and for so many other things). But because my "language" is Words of Affirmation (probably stemming from my childhood, when I got little to no positive feedback or encouragement), his loving words mean more to me than anything else, even though the other languages are important too. By the way, the 5 Love Languages, according to Dr. Chapman, are: Words of Affirmation, Quality Time, Receiving Gifts, Acts of Service, and Physical Touch (in a non-sexual way, such as spontaneously giving an affectionate hug or squeeze on the arm while passing by, bear hugs, sitting with my legs on his lap while we watch a movie, cuddling – yes, guys, cuddling is great and I’m lucky that my BF loves to do it too – and he’s as masculine as they come!). While the other languages are very important, I determined that my primary language is Words. We all have different primary languages. But I realized that, despite his showing me his love in so many ways, if he never again said "I love you" to me, or told me I'm pretty when we go out, or gives me an atta girl when I accomplish something important to me, etc., I'd feel that something major was missing (and in the book you'll read about how we all need our Love Tanks filled and the way to fill them is to speak our partner’s language regularly – that sounds silly maybe, but the book puts it into logical context). Quality time (one of the languages) doesn't mean simply being in the same room watching TV together; it means things like sitting down and talking (and listening) to each other without multi-tasking (texting, glancing at the score on TV, reading the paper, etc.), even if only 20 minutes a day. Important? Absolutely. Acts of Service: I’d bought a house last summer and when my BF was over the other day he saw an 8-foot extension ladder in my family room and asked me about it. I told him that the light bulb in the ceiling fan in my 2-story family room had burned out and I needed the ladder to reach it. The ladder was still there last night and the bulb not yet changed because when I’d climbed up and tried to remove the fixture cover, the screws were too tight so I gave it up that night, planning to go up again the next day with a wrench, pliers or other grip to loosen them, but I hadn’t had a chance to yet. So without a word last night, he got right up on the ladder and unscrewed it for me (I love a strong man!). I was grateful, absolutely, yet I also could have done it myself, so Acts of Service isn’t my primary language, though it’s still important. Receiving Gifts isn't my language either, although of course I appreciate them. Physical Touch: that comes naturally to both of us so it wasn't even a consideration since we both do it regularly. Therefore, Words are my primary language. As for my BF, turns out that's his language too, which doesn't always happen that way; most of us have different love languages. Anyway, sorry to go on and on, but I highly recommend this book, whether you're embarking on a new relationship or want to rekindle an existing one that may need a new spark. My grateful thanks to my BF's son, who sent him the book, otherwise I wouldn't have known about it. (By the way, just learning what each other's language is isn't enough. That's only the first step. From there, Dr. Chapman goes on to share how to actually speak the language, to put it into practice. My relationship was fantastic from the start, and knowing what I know now from reading this well-written book will help ensure it stays that way! So stop thinking about it: Add it to your cart! :) (And thank you, Dr. Chapman!)
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Reviewed in the United States on April 12, 2013
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Michael D.
Omaha, US
★★★★★ 5
Best
One of the best books on Love & happy relationships, along with Love by Leo Buscaglia, The five love languages, Men are from Mars, Women are from Venus, THe Romance Factor, The Practical Guide to Romantic Love by Callahan,
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Reviewed in the United States on April 1, 2026
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SAmazonShopperS
Port Orchard, US
★★★★★ 5
The most impactful book on lasting love & relationships
Profound - highly recommend this book to EVERYBODY who has or wants to have a significant other. The different love languages really resonates with me and could save many relationships. This book initially a gift to me from my childhood best friend. It practically saved her marriage. I have since read it and purchased it for other loved ones. Dr. Chapman explains how important it is for couples to understand how each other and themselves both give and receive love. It is possible for couples to truly love each other, but to truly feel unloved because they don’t think the same about giving and receiving love. Everybody generally has their own primary love languages for receiving love and giving love. It may be the same for giving/receiving, and it may be different. If a husband does not meet the primary love language of his wife, she might not sense his true feelings and start to be unsatisfied with their relationship. Understanding your spouse’s love language and acting accordingly will fill their “Love Tank”. The “Love Tank” analogy is a great metaphor for describing how loved someone feels. Meeting people’s primary love language consistently will fill up their love tank and help them feel loved like they need. But if a spouse fails to meet this primary love language, it might leave their “Love Tank” empty, which leads to feelings of being unloved and issues in relationships. Secondary languages are also important, so it's critical to reflect and understand your own priorities and that of your spouses. The five love languages are: 1. Words of Affirmation: If this is your love language, you feel most cared for when your partner is open and expressive in telling you how wonderful they think you are, how much they appreciate you, etc. 2. Acts of Service: If your partner offering to watch the kids so you can go to the gym (or relieving you of some other task) gets your heart going, then this is your love language. 3. Affection: This love language is just as it sounds. A warm hug, a kiss, touch, and sexual intimacy make you feel most loved when this is your love language. 4. Quality Time: This love language is about being together, fully present and engaged in the activity at hand, no matter how trivial. 5. Gifts: Your partner taking the time to give you a gift can make you feel appreciated.
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Reviewed in the United States on July 7, 2014

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