Q.
What went wrong after I planted Elephant Ears (Colocasia spp.) in my
back yard planter? I planted Elephant Ears last summer and at first it appeared
to flourish. Very soon thereafter it began to wilt and appeared burnt. Then of
course it died. The planter is covered in river rock. The irrigation to it, I
believe, was sufficient for the plants. The planter also holds one lemon tree
and two very tall queen palms, and they were fine. I was wondering if the river rock created too
much heat?
A.
The river rock had nothing to do with it. Colocasia or elephant ears has a lot
of things going against it in this climate; it is tender to any kind of winter
cold, it is an understory plant so it does not like direct sunlight, desert
soil doesn’t have enough “organics” in it so it must be amended, and the soil
should stay moist because it likes wet areas.
This particular elephant ears is a close
relative to taro and yam. Another plant closely related to it is Alocasia spp.,
which also has big leaves and is sometimes called elephant ears as well. All
elephant ears require a lot of babysitting in our desert climate because they are really tropical plants.
Just Because its Tropical Doesn’t Mean it Cant Grow Here
The best spot for it is in partial or
filtered shade, planted in soil high in “organics” and kept moist. Move it into
a garage when winter freezing temperatures threaten it, similar to banana and
plantain. Elephant ears is grown for its roots and leaves, not flowers so it
can grow in lower light levels than fruit trees like lemon. Sounds like a lot
of work to me.
It did well in the spring and would do
well in the fall because of cooler weather, but struggles during our hot, dry,
windy summers, and freezing winters. Lemons have a better chance. ‘Meyers’
lemon tolerates some freezing winter cold temperatures better than other
lemons. Queen palms don’t like our dry winds. They get ‘ratty’ looking.
If you want to try it, grow it only on the
north side of a home in bright sunlight under shade cloth. Amend the soil with
compost. Keep the area moist as it will not like dry soil at all.
You must address all
these problems; cold winter temperatures, amend the planting soil, provide a
location where it can get as much protection from the sun as possible without a
lack of it, keep the soil moist and windless as much as possible. It is not
like a citrus or queen palms where you have fewer things that are a challenge
for it here.