Groundcover

Blue Chalksticks

Curio repens · Asteraceae

Also called: Blue Chalksticks, Blue Chalk Sticks, Blue Fingers, Creeping Blue Chalksticks

Blue Chalksticks (Curio repens) is a very low-water groundcover well suited to Tucson and the low desert. It's a moderate-growing groundcover.

Blue Chalksticks (Curio repens) growing in Tucson
Photo: Krzysztof Golik (CC BY-SA 4.0) · Wikimedia Commons

Blue Chalksticks at a glance

Water use
Very Low (established)
Sun
Full sun to part sun develops the best powdery blue color; in Tucson it takes full sun in cooler months but appreciates light afternoon shade in peak summer to avoid tip scorch. Too much shade makes it stretch and lose color.
Mature size
Spreading mat about 8-12 in tall and 2-3+ ft wide
Growth rate
Moderate
Bloom
Off-white to pale cream (insignificant), Small whitish flower clusters appear mainly in summer; grown primarily for its blue foliage, and flowers are often sheared off.
Cold hardiness
Hardy to roughly the mid-to-high 20s F (about USDA 9b-10), so it is one of the more cold-tolerant tender succulents in Tucson; foliage may bronze or burn in a hard freeze but usually recovers. Light frost protection helps in cold pockets.
Soil
Well-drained gritty or sandy soil; performs well in decomposed-granite beds and raised plantings. Avoid soggy clay.
Native range
Western Cape, South Africa
Best used as
Low-water groundcover, Rock and cactus gardens, Container spiller, Edging and erosion control on slopes, Color contrast against greens and golds
Wildlife
Minor pollinator value; valued mainly as a xeriscape foliage groundcover.
Toxicity
Considered toxic if ingested (as a Senecio/Curio relative it can contain irritant compounds); keep pets and children from eating it, though it is mainly a contact/ingestion-irritant concern.

How to grow Blue Chalksticks in Tucson & the low desert

Watering

Very drought-tolerant once established; water deeply but infrequently (every 1-2 weeks in summer heat, monthly or less in winter) and let soil dry fully. Excess water and poor drainage are the main killers.

Fertilizer & nutrients

Low needs; an annual light topdress of compost or one dilute feeding in spring is plenty. Over-fertilizing causes weak, floppy growth.

Pruning & care

Trim or pinch back to keep the mat dense and tidy; cut stems re-root easily where they touch soil, making it easy to spread or fill gaps.

Notes

Accepted name Curio repens (syn. Senecio serpens); the very similar, taller, larger-leaved 'blue chalk sticks' in trade is Curio talinoides var. mandraliscae (syn. Senecio mandraliscae). An excellent low-desert xeriscape groundcover-pair with agave, golden barrel, and aloes; mass-plant in well-drained sun for a striking blue carpet.

Sources: AMWUA Landscape Plants for the Arizona Desert; University of Arizona Cooperative Extension / Pima County Master Gardeners; World of Succulents (worldofsucculents.com); Wikipedia: Curio repens

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