Annual

Purslane (trailing)

Portulaca oleracea · Portulacaceae

Also called: Common Purslane, Verdolaga, Pigweed, Ornamental Purslane

Purslane (trailing) (Portulaca oleracea) is a very low-water annual well suited to Tucson and the low desert. It grows to 2-8 in tall, trailing/spreading 12-18 in wide in full sun, with a fast growth rate.

Purslane (trailing) (Portulaca oleracea) growing in Tucson
Photo: ZooFari (CC BY-SA 3.0) · Wikimedia Commons

Purslane (trailing) at a glance

Water use
Very Low (established)
Sun
Full sun; flowers and growth are best in bright, hot sun. Ornamental forms bloom only in good sun.
Mature size
2-8 in tall, trailing/spreading 12-18 in wide
Growth rate
Fast
Bloom
Yellow (wild type); ornamental cultivars in pink, orange, red, magenta, white, cream, Late spring through fall; small flowers (ornamental cultivars showier) open in midday sun through the hot season.
Cold hardiness
Frost-sensitive (USDA 9a-9b); a tender, heat-loving warm-season annual. The wild form is a vigorous summer weed in Tucson.
Soil
Tolerates virtually any well-drained soil including poor, sandy, rocky, and alkaline desert soils. Fast drainage prevents rot.
Native range
Old World (likely originating in India/Middle East); now naturalized worldwide, including as a common weed in Arizona
Best used as
Edible leafy green (succulent, lemony, high in omega-3s) — verdolaga in Mexican/Sonoran cooking, Trailing color for hanging baskets and containers (ornamental cultivars), Heat-tolerant groundcover, Hot reflected-heat areas
Wildlife
Flowers attract bees and small pollinators; seeds are eaten by birds.
Toxicity
Edible to humans and a traditional food (verdolaga); however it contains soluble oxalates, so large quantities should be avoided by those prone to kidney stones, and it can cause mild digestive upset/oxalate concerns in pets if eaten in volume. Do not confuse with toxic spurge (Euphorbia) lookalikes, which have milky sap.

How to grow Purslane (trailing) in Tucson & the low desert

Watering

Extremely drought- and heat-tolerant succulent; water about once a week once established, less in cooler weather, allowing soil to dry out. Overwatering causes rot. Warm-season annual in Tucson: plant/sow after frost (Apr) into warm soil; thrives through peak summer and monsoon, often appearing on its own as a summer weed after rains.

Fertilizer & nutrients

Minimal needs; essentially no fertilizer required for the wild/edible form. Ornamental container plantings benefit from a light balanced feed.

Pruning & care

Trim trailing stems to shape and keep tidy; pinching encourages branching. For edible use, harvest tender stem tips and leaves.

Notes

Both a popular edible green (verdolaga) and the source of trailing ornamental cultivars; the wild type is one of Tucson's most common summer-monsoon weeds. Distinguish from spotted spurge by snapping a stem: purslane has no milky sap and has thick succulent leaves. Extremely tough in heat and drought.

Sources: University of Arizona Cooperative Extension (Pima County Master Gardeners; desert weed/vegetable guides); USDA / FoodData Central (edible greens); AMWUA / low-desert horticulture references

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