Tropical

Angel's trumpet

Brugmansia x candida · Solanaceae

Also called: Angel's trumpet, Datura tree (incorrectly)

Angel's trumpet (Brugmansia x candida) is a high-water tropical well suited to Tucson and the low desert.

Angel's trumpet (Brugmansia x candida) growing in Tucson
Photo: cultivar413 from Fallbrook, California (CC BY 2.0) · Wikimedia Commons

Angel's trumpet at a glance

Water use
High (established)
Sun
Morning sun with afternoon shade in Tucson; protect from harsh full/reflected sun, which scorches the large soft leaves. Bright filtered light suits it.
Mature size
6-15 ft tall and wide as a large shrub/small tree (often smaller with frost dieback in Tucson)
Growth rate
Fast in warm weather
Bloom
Large pendant trumpets in white, cream, peach, yellow, or pink, Warm season—late spring through fall, with flushes after pruning; heavily fragrant in the evening
Cold hardiness
Frost-tender; foliage and stems damaged below ~32°F and killed back by hard freeze, usually resprouting from roots. Best in a warm, protected microclimate or grown in a container that can be sheltered in winter.
Soil
Rich, well-drained, organic soil; amend Tucson's native soil heavily with compost. Excellent in large containers.
Native range
Hybrid of South American Andean species (Brugmansia aurea x B. versicolor); now extinct in the wild. Not native to Arizona
Best used as
Dramatic fragrant focal specimen, Large container plant, Sheltered courtyard / patio accent
Wildlife
Night-fragrant flowers attract hawk moths and other night pollinators.
Toxicity
HIGHLY TOXIC. All parts contain tropane alkaloids (scopolamine, atropine, hyoscyamine); ingestion can cause severe poisoning, hallucinations, paralysis, and death. Dangerous to children and pets—site away from areas they access and handle with care.

How to grow Angel's trumpet in Tucson & the low desert

Watering

A thirsty plant—keep soil consistently moist and water frequently in summer heat (often daily for containers); large leaves wilt fast when dry. Reduce in winter.

Fertilizer & nutrients

Heavy feeder for repeat bloom: apply a bloom-promoting (higher phosphorus) fertilizer regularly through the warm season; some growers feed weekly at half strength. Supplement iron in alkaline soil.

Pruning & care

Prune in late winter/early spring to shape and encourage branching; flowers form on new growth above the 'Y' branching point, so prune above that node. Remove frost-damaged wood after the last freeze.

Notes

A spectacular but high-maintenance tropical for Tucson: it needs frequent water, rich soil, afternoon shade, frost protection, and heavy feeding. Most reliable as a sheltered container plant. Note the serious toxicity—not appropriate near children, pets, or edible gardens. Do not confuse with shrubby/annual Datura (which has upward flowers).

Sources: Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum and University of Arizona Cooperative Extension (Solanaceae toxicity); Arizona Daily Star (tucson.com) tropical-plant garden columns; American Brugmansia & Datura Society culture references

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