Clear succulent plant looks like a cluster of opals

Haworthia cooperi succulents
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Plant parents and would-be plant killers alike are in love with succulents. The former can nurse them into glory and propagate them, while the latter can usually manage to keep them alive. These hearty plants typically require little more than bright light and occasional watering to become the best-looking houseplants in your pad. (Sorry, fiddle-leaf figs, but you’re fiddly.)

Lest we get overly confident about how easy succulents are to grow, however, they’re not foolproof. I managed to kill a zebra plant this winter. It happens.

Still, the succulent trend has been thriving since around 2007, according to Illinois Extension. Growers are selling them like crazy, according to Garden Center Magazine, and consumers are looking for different varieties to expand their collections.

So, if you already have jades and echeverias, burro’s tails and aloes, you might be looking for the next exciting variety of succulent. And wow, do we have a looker for you.

Check out the pearlescent clear leaves of the Haworthia cooperi, also known as the cushion aloe, in this tweet from @sfsu_greenhouse:

https://twitter.com/sfsu_greenhouse/status/1375227539539423238

It’s like a cluster of jewels! Gorgeous.

Perhaps the name “Haworthia” is ringing a bell. White-striped zebra plants, Haworthia fasciata, are particularly popular succulents that look like mini aloe plants (but aren’t). Their cooperi cousins have fleshier leaves that are so translucent that sunlight will shine right through them, making them appear to glow.

Self-proclaimed “plant nerd” @amandaraewright proudly displayed her Haworthia cooperi on Instagram, writing that she’d wanted one since she was a kid, when she wasn’t allowed to touch her grandmother’s plant.

“Now I touch them all I want,” she wrote. “I even popped one of these bubbly leaves just because I wanted to. It was like bubble wrap but juicy.”

I admit I was curious about what happens if you pop one of the leaves, in part because there’s no way I’d do that to my own plant (if I had one).

Succulent-loving Twitter user @SUCCdotCARE reminded us that these fleshy, pearlescent plants are sometimes referred to as “alien eggs.”

Many Etsy shops offer Haworthia cooperi for sale, and the prices range from around $10 to more than $30 for a large one. Succulent Box sells 2-inch cooperi for $5.45 and 4-inch plants for $9.85, and eSucculent has a variegated cooperi at $26.95 for two.

There are sellers on Amazon and Ebay, too, and if you search, you’ll find other growers selling them online. Your local garden center might have them as well — I’ve seen them at my local shop.

If you decide you’ve got to have one of these, keep it out of direct sunlight and don’t over-water it. But do keep it out on display where you can enjoy seeing this little beauty every day!

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About the Author
Jenn Fields
Jenn Fields serves as Simplemost Media’s managing editor from Colorado, where she worked as a reporter and editor, on staff and as a freelancer, at newspapers and magazines. After earning her master’s from University of Missouri’s journalism school, Jenn worked in community journalism for 10 years, writing and editing for the Boulder Daily Camera and Denver Post. Over her 20-year career, she has covered a diverse range of topics, including travel, health and fitness, outdoor sports and culture, climate science, religion and plenty of other fascinating topics.

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