SKU: 38272046497
victoria succulents

victoria succulents Buy Queen Victoria Agave Phoenix, AZ | Agave victoriae-reginae

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Description

victoria succulents Buy Queen Victoria Agave Phoenix, AZ | Agave victoriae-reginaeThe Most Stunning Geometric Agave for Phoenix Collectors & Modern Landscapes Queen Victoria Agave (Agave victoriae reginae) is widely considered the most beautiful agave in the world and for good reason. Its tight, compact rosette of dark green leaves painted with crisp white lines creates a geometric pattern that looks almost hand drawn. Slow growing and topping out at just 12 feet, this is the crown jewel of any succulent collection or modern desert

The Most Stunning Geometric Agave for Phoenix Collectors & Modern Landscapes

Queen Victoria Agave (Agave victoriae-reginae) is widely considered the most beautiful agave in the world — and for good reason. Its tight, compact rosette of dark green leaves painted with crisp white lines creates a geometric pattern that looks almost hand-drawn. Slow-growing and topping out at just 1–2 feet, this is the crown jewel of any succulent collection or modern desert garden in Scottsdale, Mesa, Chandler, Gilbert, and Tempe. It’s drought-tolerant, heat-loving, and demands almost nothing once established.

Queen Victoria Agave Plant Details

Attribute Detail
Scientific Name Agave victoriae-reginae
Common Names Queen Victoria Agave, Royal Agave, Queen Agave
Mature Height 1–1.5 feet
Mature Width 1.5–2 feet
Growth Rate Slow — reaches mature size in 5–10 years
Sun Full sun to partial shade. Handles reflected heat from walls.
Water Very low once established. Extremely drought-tolerant.
USDA Zones 9–11 (Phoenix is Zone 9b–10a)
Soil Well-draining. Adapts to Arizona caliche soils.
Foliage Evergreen — dark green leaves with distinctive white bud imprints
Terminal Spine Small black spine at each leaf tip

Queen Victoria Agave Uses in Phoenix Landscapes

Specimen & Focal Point Planting

Queen Victoria Agave is a showpiece. Plant a single specimen in a prominent spot — near an entryway, at the center of a gravel courtyard, or in a raised planter box — and it becomes the instant focal point of your landscape. Its geometric perfection draws the eye without needing any companion plants. In Scottsdale and Paradise Valley, it’s a favorite for high-end modern desert design.

Container & Patio Gardens

The compact size makes Queen Victoria Agave ideal for decorative pots on patios, courtyards, and pool decks. Use a wide, shallow terracotta or concrete bowl to showcase the rosette’s perfect symmetry. It thrives in containers for years without repotting — perfect for balconies and townhome patios in Tempe and Chandler.

Rock Garden & Desert Vignettes

Tuck Queen Victoria Agave among boulders, decomposed granite, and desert companion plants for a curated rock garden. Pair with Golden Barrel cactus for a classic desert combination, or plant alongside Blue Glow Agave for contrasting rosette shapes and colors. Space 2–3 feet apart for a grouped collection display.

Modern & Minimalist Design

The clean lines and geometric symmetry of Queen Victoria Agave make it a natural fit for contemporary landscape architecture. Plant in a linear row of 3–5 along a modern wall or pool feature for a gallery-like effect. Works beautifully in Mesa and Gilbert homes with clean desert modern aesthetics.

Best Time to Plant Queen Victoria Agave in Phoenix

Fall (October–November) is ideal. The soil is still warm for root establishment while cooler air reduces transplant stress. Spring (February–April) is the second-best window. Avoid summer planting — while this agave can handle extreme heat once established, fresh transplants struggle in 115°F conditions.

How to Plant Queen Victoria Agave

  1. Dig wide, not deep — excavate 2–3x the root ball width at the same depth as the container.
  2. Check for caliche — break through any hardpan layer completely. Drainage is critical for this species.
  3. Backfill with native soil — add 20–30% pumice or perlite for extra drainage. Avoid rich compost.
  4. Spacing — 2–3 feet apart for grouped plantings; give standalone specimens 3+ feet of clear space.
  5. Water basin — build a 2–3 inch soil ring to direct water to the root zone.
  6. Mulch with gravel — 2–3 inches of decorative rock. Keep organic mulch away from the crown to prevent rot.

Watering Queen Victoria Agave in Phoenix

First Year Watering Schedule

Weeks 1–2: Water every 5–7 days, deep and slow. Month 1–3: Every 10–14 days. Month 3–6: Every 2–3 weeks. After Year 1: Monthly in summer; little to no supplemental water in winter.

Drip Irrigation

Place one 1 GPH emitter 8–12 inches from the base. Queen Victoria Agave is extremely rot-prone if overwatered — err on the side of too dry rather than too wet. In containers, ensure the pot has drainage holes and never let it sit in a saucer of water.

How fast does Queen Victoria Agave grow?
Slowly. Expect about 1–2 inches of new growth per year. A 5 gallon specimen is typically 8–10 inches wide and may take 5–10 more years to reach full 18–24 inch spread. The slow growth is part of its appeal — it stays compact and proportional for years.

Is Queen Victoria Agave rare?
It’s not rare in the nursery trade, but large specimens are uncommon and command premium prices because of the slow growth rate. Our 10/15 gallon and 24”/25 gallon sizes represent years of growing time.

Can it handle full Phoenix summer sun?
Yes, though it appreciates some afternoon shade during the hottest weeks. In full western exposure against a block wall, the leaf tips may brown slightly — a light shade cloth during July–August peak can prevent this.

Does Queen Victoria Agave die after flowering?
Yes — like all agaves, it is monocarpic and flowers once at maturity (typically 20–30 years old), then the main rosette dies. However, it often produces offsets (pups) before flowering that carry on the plant.

You May Also Like

Blue Glow Agave — A medium-sized agave with glowing blue leaves and red margins. Beautiful contrast alongside Queen Victoria’s geometric white lines.
Parry’s Agave — A silvery-blue compact agave native to Arizona. Great companion for a native desert agave collection.
Foxtail Agave — A large, graceful agave with arching leaves that adds dramatic scale next to the compact Queen Victoria.
Golden Barrel (Bareroot) — Round, golden-spined barrel cactus — the classic partner for Queen Victoria Agave in desert rock gardens.
Safari Yellow Aloe — A bright yellow-flowering aloe that adds seasonal color around the base of agave plantings.

How Many Queen Victoria Agave Do I Need?

This is a miniature specimen agave (mature 1.5 to 2 ft wide) prized for its geometry. A single rosette makes a perfect focal point in a planter or rock vignette. For a collection display or a gallery-style row along a wall, set plants about 2 to 3 ft apart so each crisp white-lined rosette stands clear. Use the guide below to estimate counts. The terminal spine is small but firm: keep it just back from seating and pool-step edges.

Planting Plants needed (at 2 to 3 ft spacing)
Single focal point 1 plant
10 ft row / cluster 4 to 5 plants
20 ft row / collection bed 8 to 10 plants

Queen Victoria Agave Season-by-Season in Phoenix

  • Spring (Feb to Apr): Slow new growth as soil warms and the white leaf markings stay crisp. Prime second planting window and a good time to separate any pups.
  • Summer (May to Sep): Heat-loving and reflected-heat tolerant, but in the harshest west exposure the leaf tips can brown: light afternoon shade or a July-August shade cloth keeps it pristine. Monsoon rain (Jul to Sep) is usually plenty; this species rots easily, so keep soil on the dry side.
  • Fall (Oct to Nov): Prime planting season. Roots settle in warm soil and the rosette holds its form into winter.
  • Winter (Dec to Jan): Evergreen and reliably cold-tough for the Valley. Hardy to about 10°F, it needs no frost protection here and keeps its dark green and white pattern all season.

At a Glance

✔ Heat-Loving (Reflected-Heat Tolerant)   ✔ Drought-Tolerant   ✔ Evergreen   ✔ Low-Maintenance   ✔ Deer & Rabbit-Resistant   ✔ Cold-Hardy to 10°F

Plant It With

  • Blue Glow Agave: glowing blue leaves with red margins for a bold color contrast against the white-lined rosette.
  • Parry's Agave: a silvery-blue Arizona-native rosette that builds out a native agave collection.
  • Foxtail Agave: a large arching, spineless agave that adds dramatic scale beside the compact Queen Victoria.
  • Desert Spoon: a fine silver-blue native accent that fills the gravel around a collection display.

Is Queen Victoria Agave Right for Your Yard?

It thrives in full sun to light afternoon shade, demands fast-draining gravelly or caliche soil, and handles Valley heat and frost down to about 10°F. Give it lean, dry conditions and a spot where its geometry can be admired up close, in the ground or a well-drained pot. Not a fit if your soil holds water (it is very rot-prone) or if you want a fast plant for instant size: its beauty comes from slow, patient growth.

Shipping Notes
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SKU: 38272046497

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IntelliCABlonde
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★★★★★ 5
Nice toy for a bigger dog
Color: Gray, Size: 6 IN
My little rescue chihuahua has exactly one toy he can make squeak. This one is cute and he did try, but no luck. I have two large baskets of toys I've bought in the 3 years I've had him. He is only able to make one squeak. He loves it to death because he loves the squeak. It's a hedgehog that I will try to find on Amazon and replace. Poor little dog just has a very small mouth.
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Reviewed in the United States on June 3, 2026
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Al
San Leandro, US
★★★★★ 5
Semi durable
Color: Gray, Size: 8 IN
My dog has had this for 1 month, and it is still doing good! It has lost 3 out of 4 legs, but thw body is pretty strong. Dog loves the honk noises.
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Reviewed in the United States on March 7, 2026
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princeton von d
Charlottesville, US
★★★★★ 5
Luxurious Feel, Durable Build… but Full Rotation Privileges Have Been Revoked 💙🦴 🐾
Color: Blue, Size: 6 IN, Color: Blue, Size: 6 IN
🐾 Hi, I’m PVD; toy curator, plush critic & occasional chew sommelier. This armadillo arrived beautifully packaged and immediately met my standards for texture, squeak clarity and cuddle factor. I originally gave it 5 stars for quality; and still do! But today I’m updating the review to reflect my current toy lifestyle rotation. 😌 What impressed me from day one: ✔️ High-end plush feel; soft enough to nap on, tough enough for energetic zoom bites and great relief from teething ✔️ Strong stitching; survived multiple “stress tests” (I chewed with intention) ✔️ HQ squeaker; not tinny or annoying, more of a honk ✔️ 6in is perfect size for small breeds; easy to carry during dramatic hallway walks Why it now gets 4 stars from a seasoned toy collector: ✘ As my luxury toy collection expanded, this one gets grabbed less often ✘ Simple design; I now favor more interactive or complex textures ✘ Still “keep-worthy,” just no longer VIP spot on the chaise lounge Best For: • Pups who enjoy soft comfort toys or emotional support snuggles • Light to moderate chewers • Dogs who like to carry their plushes around proudly • Ideal as a teething toy or thoughtful gift 🚫 Not ideal for: power chewers or highly stimulation-driven pups (like me now; my taste evolved) 📝 Final Re-Barks: Still recommend for pups who love cuddly squeaky companions. Great starter plush and great quality; just know that ultra-picky toy enthusiasts may rotate it out once newer models (or squeakier friends) arrive. — PVD (Plush Aficionado, Toy Rotation Director & High-Maintenance Household Icon) 🐶💁🏻‍♂️✨
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Reviewed in the United States on September 17, 2025
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Sarah
Charlottesville, US
★★★★★ 4
Well Constructed Toy But Short-Life Squeaker
Color: Gray, Size: 8 IN
Super cute and durable toy. Makes a "grunting" noise that my dog loves. However rating a little lower because my dog has only been playing with it (gently) for a couple weeks and the grunting noise is starting to die. But she does really like this toy regardless!
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Reviewed in the United States on June 4, 2026
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Scoobie Doo
Houston, US
★★★★★ 5
Cute and soft dog toy!
Color: Gray, Size: 8 IN
This very cute armadillo dog toy is nice and soft for our Golden Retriever to carry around in his mouth. He eventually likes to pull off the legs, ears, or anything else extending from the body of the toy and so far he hasn’t been able to do so with this one. Not saying that it’s not possible, so as with any toy, you should monitor your dog playing with it as we definitely have to. He also likes to continually make his toys squeak and this toy’s squeaker works very well!
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