As we did not manage to walk the whole garden before dark, we returned the next day. I knew there was a Dracaena Draco path on the steep slopes – I just had to walk it!
I have always been fascinated by the Dragon tree, and many years ago I went to Icod de los Vinos, Tenerife, to see the ancient Draco, 22 meters high and trunk diameter 10meters. The inhabitants here call it El Drago Milenario: the Thousand-Year-Old Dragon.
On the ground, under Draco’s canopy, I picked 5 possible new trees…planted them at home, and – they grew up to beautiful little trees all of them. I gave away all except one. I cared for it lovingly for many years, but when it was about 1.50 meters high, a Swedish summer killed it. Too much rain made the top fall off, rotten. The tree never recovered.
So, in the the botanical garden, on the steep slopes of the Barranco de Guiniguada, Gran Canaria, I picked another 7 possible Dracaena draco. Hopefully some of them will start growing…and I will keep them away from the Swedish summer rains…
And the reward for returning here this day was…

…all I could ask for!



Have never heard of a dragon tree – beautiful!
I think they are native to the Canary islands, but introduced to Cape Verde, Madeira, and locally western Morocco, and the Azores.
You will have to put an umbrella up for them when it rains!!!
Haha – it never rains here!
beautiful thank you
Thank you for reading!
Nice photos
Thank you very much!
Another unusual tree, A-C. Good luck with your new batch
janet
😀 I hope it will work!