Main centres: | 1-3 business days |
Regional areas: | 3-4 business days |
Remote areas: | 3-5 business days |
Gasteria is a genus of 23 species of succulent plants indigenous to South Africa with all except one being endemic to South Africa. Closely related genera include Aloe, Astroloba and Haworthia. The genus name Gasteria is named for its stomach-shaped flowers. In Greek, gaster, means belly, and alludes to the swollen base of the flower. The genus is part of the family Asphodeloideae. Common names include cow-tongue cactus, lawyer's tongue, mother-in-law's tongue and ox-tongue. Gasteria species are grown in well-drained, sandy soils in light shade. Gasteria species thrive in cultivation both indoors and outdoors, used as potted plants or in outdoor rockeries and are tolerant of a wide range of soils and habitats. The flowers attract birds to the garden during spring.
Gasteria pulchra is a beautiful endemic species found in the Eastern Cape Province’s Hankey and Patensie districts in the Gamtoos Valley and in adjacent regions of the Eastern Cape Province. It is distributed from Studtis, in Baviaanskloof in the northwest, to Hankey in the southeast. Gasteria pulchra blooms from winter to late spring with a peak during mid-spring. |