Where to Plant Yucca
Select a location in full or partial sun. The most important requirement is that the soil drains well. If it doesn’t, the plant will die. You can also plant yuccas in containers to be moved in and out according to the weather or as full-time houseplants.
Foliage and Flowers
The foliage of the yucca is the main draw for growing these plants. The leaves come in a wide variety of colors, most often a silvery green. You can also find them in variegated varieties with gold, green, cream, blue, and even pink, in the right season. Some yuccas have thread-like filaments that curl off the edge of foliage for a unique addition to the evergreen leaves. The texture of the foliage can vary from thin, almost grass-like leaves to thick, wide leaves. The flowers develop on extremely tall stalks in masses of white and cream and sometimes blush pink.
Yucca Care Tips
Because many species of yuccas are native to the most arid areas of the United States, these plants make great rugged garden companions.
Light
Their native growth in wide-open areas with little overhead competition means these plants perform best in the garden in full sun, which provides the most intense colorations of the variegated varieties and the most prolific flowers. While yuccas can survive in part sun, plants often become sparse, and the leaves are more narrow and leggy. Part sun also increases the likelihood of rot, as the soil is more likely to stay wet.
Soil and Water
Yuccas require well-drained soil, or they will quickly rot and die. When planting along with other perennials, avoid pairing yuccas with plants that need continuous water, as this is not an ideal environment for yuccas. While yuccas are tolerant of different soil conditions, including sand and clay, they must remain dry.
Fertilizer
Yuccas are slow growers that live in a relatively stark environment. Still, they benefit from fertilization a couple of times a year with a low-nitrogen fertilizer—either granular or liquid.
Pruning
Yucca plants in the garden don’t usually need any pruning except to remove a damaged or diseased area.
Potting
Yuccas make a great container plant that will continue to thrive even if you forget about them. These plants can be brought indoors for the winter. Water sparingly and feed them once a month with a low-nitrogen fertilizer.
Pests and Problems
Agave plant bugs pierce the leaves of yucca plants and suck out the juices. They are a half-inch long, so they are easy to see and identify. Treat them with several applications of insecticidal soap. Yuccas are also vulnerable to the usual culprits: aphids, mealybugs, and scale, which are treated on yuccas just as they are on other garden plants, with sprays of water or neem oil (for scale).
How to Propagate
Propagate yucca by cutting off a section of a mature plant. Wait a few days for the cut to “heal,” strip off any leaves at the bottom, and plant it in a container filled with good-quality potting soil or a cactus and succulent mix. Keep it warm and water it occasionally. Rooting will start in three to four weeks. If you prefer to skip the container step, the best way to propagate some outdoor yuccas is through division. Lift a small—but mature—plant out of the ground using a shovel. With your hands, separate sections of plant and roots until you have several new plants. Replant the parent and plant the divisions outside.
Types of Yucca
‘Bright Edge’ Yucca
Yucca filamentosa makes a substantial clump of rigid, spiny-tipped variegated leaves about 2½-feet long, edged with curly threads. The leaves are broadly banded with creamy yellow. Imposing 8-to-10-foot-tall spires of white flowers appear in mid to late summer. It is hardy in Zones 4-11.
‘Color Guard’ Yucca
Yucca flaccida has beautiful foliage streaked with bright gold down the center and looks stunning year-round. Stalks of white blooms as tall as 6 feet may appear in spring. It is hardy in Zones 4-10.
Spineless Yucca
This type of Yucca elephantipes is a variety often grown as a houseplant. This yucca lacks needle-like spines and can reach staggering heights of up to 30 feet. It is hardy in Zones 9-10.
Variegated Yucca
This variegated selection of Yucca aloifolia is a form of the southeastern U.S. native that can reach up to 7 feet tall. It is hardy in Zones 7-9.
Yucca Companion Plants
Coreopsis
One of the longest bloomers in the garden, coreopsis produces (usually) sunny yellow daisy-like flowers that attract butterflies. Depending on the variety, coreopsis also bears golden-yellow, pale yellow, pink, or bicolor flowers. It will bloom from early to midsummer or longer if it’s deadheaded.
Hens and Chicks
A favorite of our grandmothers and great-grandmothers, hens and chicks are popular once again with gardeners looking for drought-tolerant, easy-care plants. Darlings of today’s xeriscape gardens, trough gardens, and rooftop gardens, these plants are appreciated for their easy care and tolerance for extremely dry conditions. The neat rosettes multiply freely by runners that form dense colonies. Flowering rosettes die after bloom time but are quickly replaced. They are excellent between pavers on patios and walkways.
Salvia
There are hundreds of different types of salvias, commonly called sage, but they all tend to share beautiful, tall flower spikes and attractive, often gray-green leaves. Countless sages (including the herb used in cooking) are available to decorate ornamental gardens, and new selections appear annually. They are valued for their very long bloom season, right up until frost. Not all not hardy in cold climates, but they are easy to grow as annuals. On square stems, clothed with often-aromatic leaves, sages carry dense or loose spires of tubular flowers in bright blues, violets, yellow, pinks, and red that mix well with other perennials in beds and borders. Provide full sun or very light shade in well-drained average soil.