SKU: 12130987135
ice plant in a pot

ice plant in a pot Buy Purple Ice Plant Phoenix, AZ | Delosperma cooperi

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Description

ice plant in a pot Buy Purple Ice Plant Phoenix, AZ | Delosperma cooperiPhoenix's Favorite Low Water Groundcover Purple Ice Plant Purple Ice Plant (Delosperma cooperi) is one of the most eye catching drought tolerant groundcovers you can plant in the Phoenix Valley. Its succulent, mat forming habit smothers weeds, controls erosion, and rewards you with a carpet of vivid purple blooms that draw pollinators from spring through fall. Unlike most flowering groundcovers, this plant truly thrives on neglect low water, minimal

Phoenix's Favorite Low-Water Groundcover — Purple Ice Plant

Purple Ice Plant (Delosperma cooperi) is one of the most eye-catching drought-tolerant groundcovers you can plant in the Phoenix Valley. Its succulent, mat-forming habit smothers weeds, controls erosion, and rewards you with a carpet of vivid purple blooms that draw pollinators from spring through fall. Unlike most flowering groundcovers, this plant truly thrives on neglect — low water, minimal fertilizer, and Phoenix's intense summer heat. Whether you're covering a bare slope in Scottsdale, adding low-maintenance color along a Chandler driveway, or filling gaps in a Mesa desert garden bed, Purple Ice Plant delivers season-long beauty with almost zero effort.

Purple Ice Plant Plant Details

Attribute Detail
Scientific Name Delosperma cooperi
Common Names Purple Ice Plant, Hardy Ice Plant, Trailing Ice Plant
Mature Height 3–6 inches
Mature Width 18–24 inches (spreads as a mat)
Growth Rate Moderate — fills in well within one season in Phoenix
Sun Full sun (6+ hrs). Thrives with reflected heat from walls and pavement.
Water Low once established. Extremely drought-tolerant succulent.
USDA Zones 5–11 (Phoenix is Zone 9b–10a — ideal)
Soil Well-draining. Tolerates Arizona caliche soils with proper drainage.
Foliage Semi-evergreen — fleshy, succulent leaves stay green most of the year
Bloom Color Vivid purple/magenta daisy-like flowers, spring through fall

Purple Ice Plant Uses in Phoenix Landscapes

Low-Water Slope and Erosion Control

Purple Ice Plant's creeping, mat-forming growth makes it ideal for stabilizing slopes and hillsides in Phoenix neighborhoods. Its dense root system binds soil against monsoon washouts while suppressing weeds. Plant 12–18 inches apart across a slope for full coverage within one growing season — a much cheaper and more attractive alternative to gravel or bark mulch.

Rock Garden and Desert Landscape Filler

The succulent foliage and vivid purple blooms contrast beautifully with desert boulders and gravel in modern Phoenix landscaping. Use it to fill gaps between boulders, along dry streambeds, or as a low-maintenance accent among agaves and cacti. It pairs especially well with Yellow Bells, Desert Marigold, and Agave for a stunning, low-water composition that blooms most of the year.

Pollinator Garden Groundcover

From late spring through fall, Purple Ice Plant's daisy-like blooms are a magnet for bees and butterflies — making it an excellent choice for Phoenix pollinator gardens. Plant in drifts of 5–10 plants for the most impact. Its bloom period complements other Three Timbers pollinator plants like Texas Sage and Ruellia, extending the season of color in your yard.

Pool-Friendly Edging and Border Plant

Purple Ice Plant's low, spreading habit makes it perfect for pool-area borders in Gilbert, Peoria, and Tempe. It creates a soft, lush edge without dropping leaves or large debris into the water. Its bright purple flowers add color poolside during the warm season when you're using the space most.

Best Time to Plant Purple Ice Plant in Phoenix

Fall (October–November) is the best planting window. The soil stays warm enough for root development while cooler air reduces transplant stress — and the plant gets 6–8 months of root establishment before facing its first Phoenix summer. Spring (February–April) is a solid second-best option. Avoid planting in peak summer heat (June–August) if you can help it, as new transplants need extra irrigation support during the monsoon gap.

How to Plant Purple Ice Plant

  1. Dig wide, not deep — 2x the width of the root ball at the same depth. Purple Ice Plant has shallow roots and doesn't like sitting in a deep hole.
  2. Check for caliche — break through any hardpan layer to ensure water drains away from the roots. Soggy soil is this plant's only real enemy.
  3. Backfill with native soil — a light 20% organic amendment is fine. Avoid heavy compost that retains too much moisture.
  4. Spacing — 12–18 inches apart for groundcover use; 24 inches for individual accent plants.
  5. Water basin — build a 2–3 inch ring around the plant to direct water to roots at establishment.
  6. Mulch — 1–2 inches of gravel mulch (not wood chips) to retain moisture without holding excess water against the crown.

Watering Purple Ice Plant in Phoenix

First Year Watering Schedule

  • Weeks 1–2: Every 2–3 days, deep and slow
  • Month 1–2: Every 4–5 days
  • Month 3–6: Every 7–10 days (5–7 days in peak summer)
  • After Year 1: Every 14–21 days in summer; rainfall alone may suffice in winter

Drip Irrigation

Place emitters 12–15 inches from the crown of each plant. A 0.5–1 GPH emitter running 20–30 minutes is ideal for established plants in the growing season. Once Purple Ice Plant is established, it's one of the most water-efficient groundcovers in the Phoenix palette — often surviving on rainwater alone in cooler months.

How fast does Purple Ice Plant grow in Phoenix?
In Phoenix, it spreads 12–18 inches in the first growing season under good conditions. By year two, individual plants typically fill their full 18–24 inch spread. Fall-planted specimens establish quickly and often bloom by the following spring.

Is it truly drought-tolerant once established?
Yes — Delosperma cooperi is a succulent that stores water in its fleshy leaves. Once established (6–12 months in Phoenix), it can survive on supplemental water every 2–3 weeks in summer and little to no irrigation in winter. It's one of the best choices for water-wise Phoenix gardens.

Can Purple Ice Plant handle Phoenix summer heat?
Absolutely. Unlike many flowering groundcovers that go dormant in Phoenix summers, Purple Ice Plant continues to bloom through much of the hot season as long as it has good drainage. It especially thrives with reflected heat from south-facing walls and driveways.

Does Purple Ice Plant stay green year-round?
It is semi-evergreen in Phoenix. The foliage remains mostly green through mild winters. Temperatures below 20°F can cause some die-back, but Phoenix rarely sees those extremes — so most plants stay lush and green all year.

How does it do near a pool?
Purple Ice Plant is pool-friendly. It's a low, compact grower that doesn't drop significant debris, and it tolerates the occasional splash. Its bright blooms add color to pool areas during the warmer months when you're using the space most.

You May Also Like

Green Carpet Natal Plum — Another low-growing, drought-tolerant groundcover with glossy foliage and fragrant white flowers, ideal for Phoenix borders and slopes.

Texas Sage — Purple-blooming desert shrub that pairs beautifully with Purple Ice Plant for a coordinated color palette in low-water Phoenix gardens.

Ground Morning Glory — Spreading groundcover with silver foliage and white trumpet flowers, great for filling hot, dry areas in Phoenix and Scottsdale landscapes.

New Gold Lantana — Spreading, heat-loving groundcover with yellow blooms that complements Purple Ice Plant's purple flowers and thrives in the same sunny Phoenix conditions.

How Many Purple Ice Plant Do I Need?

Each plant spreads 18 to 24 inches wide. At 15 inch on-center spacing the succulent mat closes in within a season. Use the table below to estimate plant counts:

Area to Cover Plants Needed (15 in o.c.)
25 sq ft 16
50 sq ft 32
100 sq ft 64
200 sq ft 128

For erosion control on a slope, plant in staggered rows; tighten to 12 inch spacing for the fastest cover, or open to 18 inches to stretch a budget over a larger area.

Purple Ice Plant Season-by-Season in Phoenix

  • Spring (Feb–Apr): Vivid purple-magenta daisy blooms open over fresh succulent growth, drawing bees and butterflies. A strong second planting window.
  • Summer (May–Sep): Keeps blooming through much of the hot season where many groundcovers quit, especially with reflected heat off south walls and driveways. Monsoon rain (Jul–Sep) is plenty; back the drip way off in wet weeks since soggy soil is its only real enemy.
  • Fall (Oct–Nov): Prime planting season and a continued bloom flush as temperatures ease.
  • Winter (Dec–Jan): Stays mostly green and semi-evergreen through Valley winters. It is genuinely cold-hardy (rated to zone 5), so Phoenix frosts pose no threat; only sustained temperatures near 20°F cause minor dieback that recovers in spring.

At a Glance

✔ Drought-Tolerant   ✔ Heat-Loving (Reflected-Heat Tolerant)   ✔ Pool-Friendly (Low-Litter)   ✔ Pollinator-Friendly   ✔ Low-Maintenance   ✔ Cold-Hardy to 0°F

Plant It With

  • Green Carpet Natal Plum: a glossy, fragrant-flowered groundcover to weave alongside for contrasting texture.
  • Texas Sage: a purple-blooming shrub backdrop that coordinates with the magenta flowers.
  • Red Ice Plant: a sister Delosperma in red for a two-tone succulent carpet.
  • AZ Ice Plant (Copper): a copper-toned ice plant for a multi-color bloom drift in full sun.

Is Purple Ice Plant Right for Your Yard?

Purple Ice Plant is a top choice for full-sun slopes, rock gardens, pollinator drifts, and pool-edge borders with sharp drainage, where its long bloom season and reflected-heat tolerance shine on almost no water. It is not a fit for shade or for heavy, poorly drained soil that stays wet, where the shallow succulent crown will rot.

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Krystina
Grantham, US
★★★★★ 5
A bewitching retelling of Arthurian legend!
Format: Kindle
In a land where the Fae have nearly become only a legend and those who still posses even a morsel of the blood are few and far between, Morgan finds herself cast aside by most of society due to her rumored half-Fae lineage, including her brother, King Arthur. With the kingdom at the brink of war, Arthur entrusts her with a quest to retrieve a Fae weapon of legendary power: the sword of Perun, Excalibur. Accompanied by men she loathes, Captain Kairos Draven and Ragnar Whitehorn, she embarks on her long and unbeknownst perilous journey, only to find that things she once believed to be myth are in fact very real. With devastating twists, omitted truths, witty banter and fierce action, Queen of Roses leaves you begging to know more about the secrets of Aercanum! Wow, wow, wow! Going into this story, I did not realize that it was going to be a retelling of Arthurian legend, especially not one with a fantastical twist! The unique spin almost gave me The Witcher vibes and I think adding Fae into the mix was quite interesting. I knew the basics of the legend but after reading this book, it has piqued my interest and makes me want to learn more about it. My attention was snatched as soon as I finished the prologue and I knew that I was going to devour this story. I truly enjoyed the gender swaps and even how Arthur was portrayed as villainous. Morgan’s past and even her parts of her present is absolutely heartbreaking, and I felt for her at times. I can only recall one other book that made me hate characters the way I despised Florian and Arthur, leaving me with my blood boiling and feeling disgusted. Even after finishing the book, Draven is still a mystery to me and I cannot figure out how to feel about him. I guess they just means that the author did an excellent job at conveying each character’s persona! The rich world building and imagery made it easy for me to visualize the places that the group visited along their journey. I am truly engulfed in this story and I cannot wait to see wait fate awaits Morgan and how the Fae will be even more incorporated in the next book!. I received a free copy of this book and am voluntarily leaving a review.
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Reviewed in the United States on August 11, 2023
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Tiana
Alexandria, US
★★★★★ 4
Enchanting
Format: Kindle
"Queen of Roses" by Briar Boleyn is a delightful and refreshing reimagining of the classic tale of King Arthur, with a captivating twist that places the spotlight on Morgan, a character who has often been overshadowed in traditional retellings. Boleyn's creative decision to shift the narrative perspective to Morgan breathes new life into the story, offering readers an intriguing and compelling look at the Arthurian world from an entirely different angle. One of the most commendable aspects of this book is its incorporation of Fae elements, which adds an enchanting layer of magic and mystery to the already familiar Arthurian setting. Boleyn skillfully weaves the world of the Fae into the narrative, creating a captivating backdrop against which the events of the story unfold. This addition not only adds depth to the world-building but also provides ample opportunities for twists and turns that keep readers thoroughly engrossed. However, while the book boasts numerous strengths, it does have one noticeable flaw: the characterization of Morgan. While it is reasonable to create a flawed and complex protagonist, it appears that at times, Morgan's character becomes overly difficult and hard to relate to. Her persistently negative perception of one of the main male characters, who is a potential love interest, despite his efforts to support and assist her, may come across as somewhat irrational and could test the patience of some readers. Striking a balance between a strong, independent character and one who can recognize genuine support and affection could have enhanced the overall reader experience. Nonetheless, the allure of "Queen of Roses" lies in its innovative approach to the Arthurian legend and its skillful blending of fantasy elements into a familiar narrative. Boleyn's evocative prose draws readers into a world where magic, destiny, and fate entwine, leaving us eager to uncover the mysteries that unfold within the pages. I received a free copy of this book via Booksprout and am voluntarily leaving a review.
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Reviewed in the United States on July 28, 2023
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Stephanie
Dallas, US
★★★★★ 5
An action-packed dark romantasy
Format: Kindle
I loved this book! Queen of Roses is an Arthurian-inspired dark romantasy that is the first book in the Blood of Fae series. The story follows Morgan, the princess of Camelot who is rumored to be part fae. Fueled by prejudiced hatred and a mistrust of fae blood, Morgan’s abusive father strips her of her birthright and hands it to her half-brother, Arthur. Instead of becoming queen, Morgan is commanded to join the temple of the goddesses when she comes of age. However, Arthur turns into a psychopathic, power-hungry, fae-hating king as he ages. He develops malevolent plans and commands Morgan to find an ancient weapon with legendary power. Although Morgan is wary of Arthur’s intentions, she embraces the opportunity to go on a journey and potentially change her fate. The story picks up from there and we follow Morgan on her quest to find the ancient relic. It’s full of high stakes adventure, mystery, tension, banter, forced proximity, hidden magic, self discovery, and betrayal. This first installment of the series intricately develops the world building and character development. There’s little romance in this book, but it is evident that it is a slow burn that will continue to develop throughout the remainder of the series. Overall, I loved the world building, the epic fantasy, Morgan’s journey of self discovery, and all of the twists and turns that set the stage for the future installments. I can’t wait to see what happens next!
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Reviewed in the United States on April 7, 2024
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AlynReads
Waukegan, US
★★★★★ 4
Arthurian Fae Quest…say less.
Format: Kindle
A fae centered Arthurian tale unlike any I’ve read so far. The author did a great job at descriptive world building, with scenes easily playing out in my minds eye. There was plenty of action, suspense, and even a touch of horror. An enemies to lovers, slow burn romance, a quest, with plot twist and turns aplenty. There was a love triangle, which I’m not usually a fan of but, it played out well in this story line. The FMC, Morgan Pendragon, was so blatantly naïve, yet I typically expect as much in a ‘book one’ of a series, especially one that features a fairly sheltered princess. I was happy to read that in spite of this, she still showed a strong sense of morals, fire, and spine. Now our MMC? Kairos Draven, aka Void’s Edge. Oh, how I’m a sucker for a smoking’ hot grumpy warrior alpha with a witty mouth, and a strong sense of “touch her and die” attitude, so you know who held all my cards. That ending? Just made me swoon all the harder. Now add a battlecat that rivals the size of a horse…and well Ms. Briar Boleyn you have well and truly stolen my heart. I’m excited to see where the story goes from here, and follow along to see more of the characters growth. I went into this story fairly blind, and I think I enjoyed it all the more because of it. Once the story got going, it had me in an absolute chokehold and it was difficult to put down.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 12, 2024
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Ariel
Dallas, US
★★★★★ 3
Not a bad start
Format: Kindle
3 stars Thank you Netgalley and Briar Boleyn for the ARC! A camelot/king Arthur retelling with fae. I was hooked by the idea of this book immediately and was eager to jump into this world. • slow burn • enemies to lovers • who did this to you Morgan Pendragon watched her mother die by her father's hand when she was just eight years old, hiding under the bed. Morgan is believed to have the tainted blood of the fae in her veins and is cast aside so that her fathers illegitimate son, Arthur, can become the king. She's seen his cruel treatment of the fae firsthand, so when he sends her on a journey to find a fae weapon she seizes the opportunity to do more with her life. Along the way, she finds more than she could have imagined. I don't know a whole lot about King Arthur and Camelot but I had a lot of fun with this story! The plot has some similar tropes to popular romantasy books (From blood and ash) but there's enough originality here that it doesn't feel like I'm reading a copy. I liked how the fae were different in appearance than what is typical in most fantasy books I've read. In this book they have blue hair, violet skin and a wide range of other characteristics. I thought that the world building was easy to follow and I could easily immerse myself into this world. After reading the blurb I kept wondering when she was going to go on the journey to find Excalibur and it doesn't happen until around the 45% mark. The story is a bit slow at times but starts to pick up once they begin their journey to find Excalibur. The John Wick style Inn was a fun concept that I enjoyed reading about. There are a lot of similarities to this and FBAA and I would have liked to have it be a little more different, but I'm hoping book two will have the story turn into something of its own. Overall I enjoyed reading this story and I'm looking forward to reading book two especially after that ending.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 27, 2023

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