Aloe Vera Flower: A Rare Herbal Gift

in #herballast year

Aloe Vera grows like everywhere! - and no one thinks it's particularly special. In a country with an astounding variety of healing and medicinal plants, it's at the garden-variety, helps-your-skin-heal end of things.

None of this nonsense of carefully planting out pups... 😆 you literally throw a piece over your shoulder in the garden and don't even have to cover it with soil... it will just grow and keep reproducing.

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But in my 20 odd (emphasis on odd 🤣) years of living here, I've never actually watched an aloe vera go through its entire flowering process. Until this last month... And what a joy, and a learning journey it has been!

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Ironically it was the much-neglected, never-repotted-in-living-memory aloe pot that we use as a door stop on the front porch that popped into flower.

It started like this...

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The stem grew TALL until it stood a good 12-15 inches above the plant. I discovered via some niche garden content online that aloe vera plants generally need at least 3-4 years before they flower, and that they only flower under ideal conditions. Thankfully they produce pups like crazy and we're not waiting for that elusive flower for the plant to reproduce.

As the flower began to unfurl, I watched in awe.

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I learned a lot about the unique pollination process of the aloe vera flower.

Aloe vera produces flowers that are protandrous, which means the stamen, or pollen-releasing part of the flower, releases pollen before the stigma, which receives pollen, is receptive. This makes the plants unable to self-pollinate. For this reason, Aloe vera relies on mobile pollinators to grow and thrive. Source

The most common pollinators are tiny hummingbirds. Having learned this, I suddenly understood why my gorgeous aloe flower appeared all fluff & bobble and actually produced nothing by way of fruit. Given this pots location near our front door, I understood why the local hummingbirds gave it a wide berth. Clearly one needs more than one aloe plant flowering at a time to even be thinking about expecting fruit. Good to know.

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The more I knew about the process of the aloe flower, the more questions I had:
If the aloe plant doesn't NEED the plant for reproduction, then what exactly is it really for?
And are it's properties the same, or different from, the healing gel contained within the aloe leaf?
The first question is easy to answer: the plant produces seeds occasionally to protect and retain the integrity its genetic lineage.

Searching for an answer to the question of the healing properties of the flower, vs the aloe gel, was not so straightforward. The first discouraging finding perhaps only showcased the narrow focus of the researcher:

Comparative Study of Antioxidant Activity of Flower of Aloe vera and Leaf Extract of Aloe ferox

Results of the present study showed that antioxidant capacity of whole leaf of Aloe ferox Mill was significantly higher than Aloe vera flowers.

Intuitively I just knew that the aloe flowers have a very specific and powerful healing purpose, but I had some difficulty pinpointing exactly what. So I kept on trawling through various botanical studies I located using http://base-search.net Honestly, you really want to think about using varying search engines for research, cos it is somewhat frightening at what the google, bing and even duckduckgo machinery refuses to show you!!

My trawling and digging around in the online equivalent of the stacks paid off!!

A 2019 study, Insights into the phenolic composition and bioactive properties of Aloe vera flower, produced some truly ground-breaking results:

The extract revealed an interesting antioxidant activity, being able to protect the erythrocyte membranes and the β-carotene from the free radical generated in the in vitro reaction system. It was also able to inhibit and kill multidrug-resistant bacteria such as Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Escherichia coli and some fungi, including Candida albicans. It also inhibited the tyrosinase enzyme activity, which translates its potential as a skin whitening agent. Based on these results, it was concluded that the Aloe vera flower could be exploited by industrial sectors interested in bio-based ingredients due to its composition in flavonoids and antioxidant, antimicrobial, and tyrosinase inhibition properties.

Inhibit and kill drug resistant bacteria and fungi? 😮
Suddenly an aloe vera flower tincture NEEDS to be part of every natural medicne home health kit.

The other primary finding as a tyrosinase enzyme inhibitor is of nominal professional interest. I get ask ALL THE TIME about natural skin whitening agents. I personally prefer NOT to produce natural skin lightening products, since I believe beauty is not about looks or skin colour; I try to actively foster a culture of inclusion and diversity around me, rather than promoting a natural-how-to to help more wanna-be-lighter-skinned Asians. Nevertheless, it's interesting to know this is out there as an option.

So, I am now on a mission to encourage ALL my aloe plants to flower!! Because a super-tincture for treating drug resistant bacteria and fungi seems to be something that will get some serious use as our world continues to slather anti-biotics on most everything, continues to degrade natural people's immunity and continues to keep destroying the earth's natural balance which, in turn, provides opportunity for the super-bugs to thrive.

Have YOU ever had your aloe vera plants flower?
Hope you learned something from this herbal ramble and are encouraged to keep exploring, keep reading and keep growing your own herbal medicine, wherever you are in the world.

photography : Aloe Vera Flower
camera : Xiaomi Redmi 9c
location : Lecheria, Venezuela

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