FLASH SALES: 30% off selected plants to prepare your garden for summer! Only until tuesday night
Share your pictures? Hide split images
I have read and agree the terms and conditions of service.

Colocasia esculenta - Elephant Ears

Colocasia esculenta
Taro, Elephant's Ear, Dasheen, Eddoe

4,7/5
12 reviews
1 reviews
2 reviews
0 reviews
0 reviews

Beautiful bulb currently planted in a pot in the garden shed, ready to be placed outside as soon as the temperatures allow.

Roselyne, 30/03/2023

Leave a review → View all reviews →

Shipping country:

Select delivery date,

and select date in basket

This plant carries a 6 months recovery warranty

More information

Value-for-money
This tuberous perennial is produced in tropical regions for its edible tuber. This magnificent plant can reach a height of 1.5m (5ft). Its long petioles bear fresh green heart-shaped leaves that can reach a length of 60cm (24in). This tender perennial makes a beautiful addition to ponds and patios, as well as indoors. It is suitable for fertile moist soil.
Flower size
15 cm
Height at maturity
1.50 m
Spread at maturity
60 cm
Exposure
Sun, Partial shade
Hardiness
Hardy down to -6°C
Soil moisture
Moist soil, Damp soil
plantfit-full

Would this plant suit my garden?

Set up your Plantfit profile →

Best planting time February to April
Recommended planting time March to June
J
F
M
A
M
J
J
A
S
O
N
D
Flowering time July to August
J
F
M
A
M
J
J
A
S
O
N
D

Description

Colocasia esculenta, also known as taro, is a large perennial plant that thrives in waterlogged soil. It is also called elephant ear due to its immense leaves. It is extensively cultivated in tropical regions for its edible tuber. This spectacular plant develops long petioles that bear heart-shaped or spear-shaped leaves. With their fresh green colour, slight pleating, and exotic appearance, they are a beautiful addition to water features. Its yellow inflorescence, in the form of a cone called a spathe, reveals its relationship with arums. This stunning tropical plant will thrive in a bright and warm indoor environment, as well as in partially shaded areas in the ground, in the few regions spared by frost.

 

Undoubtedly originating from India and tropical Asia, Colocasia esculenta spread to tropical regions of South America and Oceania long ago, and more recently to tropical Africa. This rhizomatous perennial plant is a relative of arums and Monstera deliciosa. It belongs to the Araceae family. With a slight tendency to sucker, this herbaceous perennial plant develops from a tuberous rhizome, forming a scaly corm covered with a thick skin. The mature plant forms a large spreading clump that typically measures 1.5m (5ft) in height with an 80cm (32in) diameter at the base. It consists of magnificent peltate foliage that is slightly elongated and heart-shaped. The leaves are light green and distinctively veined with varying shades of blue-grey and tender green. The leaf blade can reach up to 60cm (24in) in length and 40cm (16in) in width, supported by a long violet to brown petiole that sheaths at the base. The leaf surface is water-repellent. As the plant grows, it branches out from the base and produces numerous runner tubers that give rise to vigorous young plants. When an old leaf is removed, two new ones take its place. Flowering occurs on mature plants in the form of yellow spathes, typically in summer.

 

Colocasia esculenta can be grown in containers and overwintered in a conservatory. It may potentially withstand the mildest Mediterranean-type climates. This lush perennial plant will bring a strongly exotic touch when placed in a partially shaded area, paired with bamboo, cycads, Tetrapanax papyrifera, banana plants, or hibiscus. It will stand out as a focal point in contemporary or exotic settings, whether planted in a large container on a patio or along the edges of a water feature, where it thrives in waterlogged and fertile soil. This voracious plant gets along well with arums (Zantedeschia aethiopica), banana plants, gunnera, and tree ferns, which recall the magnificence of ancient forests. This plant will bring the luxuriance of its native lands to our gardens and urban balconies. It is also a beautiful indoor plant that becomes a centrepiece over time, just like Monstera deliciosa.

 

Taro is consumed in Africa, China, Polynesia, and several other parts of the world. Its tubers are rich in starch, and its young leaves are eaten like spinach. 

 

Colocasia esculenta - Elephant Ears in pictures

Colocasia esculenta - Elephant Ears (Foliage) Foliage

Plant habit

Height at maturity 1.50 m
Spread at maturity 60 cm
Growth rate fast

Flowering

Flower colour yellow
Flowering time July to August
Inflorescence Spadix
Flower size 15 cm
Flowering description The appearance of the inflorescence is random. It develops on mature subjects.

Foliage

Foliage persistence Evergreen
Foliage colour green

Safety measures

Potential risks Plant that can cause skin and mucous membrane reactions

Botanical data

Genus

Colocasia

Species

esculenta

Family

Araceae

Other common names

Taro, Elephant's Ear, Dasheen, Eddoe

Origin

Southeast Asia

Other Other summer bulbs

  1. 1
    From 10,90 € Bulb

  2. 43
    From 2,70 € Bulb

  3. 18
    From 2,70 € Bulb

Planting and care

It is a non-hardy perennial that is typically grown as a greenhouse or conservatory plant. Place your Colocasia in a bright indoor location. Full sunlight will burn the foliage. It appreciates nitrogen-rich fertiliser, such as grass clippings. You can plant it in large containers, with regular and generous watering during the growing season, and reduced watering in winter. If the atmosphere is too dry in winter, it may be susceptible to attacks from scale insects and red spider mites. 

In regions unaffected by frost, it is possible to attempt cultivation in open ground. In autumn, place a thick mulch around the base to protect the rootstock from the cold. The foliage may completely disappear, but the plant should regrow from the stump as soon as temperatures rise. If the soil becomes waterlogged in winter, the rootstock may rot, so the soil will need to be drained.

Be aware of attacks from slugs and snails that enjoy feeding on young leaves.

Planting period

Best planting time February to April
Recommended planting time March to June

Intended location

Suitable for Woodland edge, Pond edge
Type of use Border, Container, Greenhouse, Conservatory
Hardiness Hardy down to -6°C (USDA zone 9a) Show map
Ease of cultivation Amateur
Planting density 2 per m2
Exposure Sun, Partial shade
Soil pH Acidic, Neutral
Soil moisture Moist soil, Damp soil, Fertile, well-draining.

Care

Pruning No pruning necessary
Soil moisture Moist soil, Damp soil
Disease resistance Good
Overwinter Needs to be stored
4,7/5
No reviews
No reviews

Bulbs for the home

  1. 151
    -40% 4,50 € 7,50 € Bulb

  2. 10
    From 4,90 € Bulb

  3. Out of stock
    From 7,50 € Bulb

  4. Out of stock
    From 7,50 € Bulb

  5. Out of stock
    From 7,50 € Bulb

  6. 160
    -40% 3,90 € 6,50 € Bulb

  7. 29
    From 4,90 € Bulb

  8. 21
    From 5,20 € Bulb

  9. 6
    From 5,20 € Bulb

  10. 9
    From 7,50 € Bulb

  11. 40
    From 4,30 € Bulb

Haven't found what you were looking for?