Plant profile - Pelargonium australe

Plant profile - Pelargonium australe

Rosie Hardy of Hardy's Cottage Garden Plants in Hampshire recently came to help out with a photoshoot at Genus HQ.  She surprised us with a small plant as a gift.  Most of us were baffled as to its identity - a diminutive plant with vaguely familiar leaves and flowers.  Rosie pointed out that it was a Pelargonium - Pelargonium australe.  Originally from Australia, it has delicate dark green foliage and small white flowers with stark magenta veining.  Given time it can reach 50cm in height and spread.

It’s an ideal plant for growing in pots and even better for forgetful gardeners as it copes well if unwatered and left in dry conditions.  It is tender so needs to be brought inside over winter.  Rosie says it makes an ideal houseplant and will continue to flower throughout the year.  In the home, the growth can become a little ‘stretched’ due to the lower light conditions but this can give extra material for propagation if desired.  Propagation is however considered tricky so it's worth taking several cuttings to take into account losses.  We love it and suspect Pelargonium australe will be a favourite of ours for years to come.


Modern heroes of horticulture - Roz Chandler

Roz Chandler didn’t grow up knowing she would become a flower farmer.  In fact, when she first moved to a five-acre smallholding near Milton Keynes in 2007, it was livestock,...
Read More

Garden gadgets - leaf grabbers

These have got to be one of the most useful and yet inexpensive bits of kit for the gardener at this time of year, when raking is a weekly, if...
Read More

Greener gardening - install a water butt

The weather may be turning, but think back to just a few weeks ago when repeated heatwaves left our gardens wilting.  Hosepipe bans are becoming a frequent occurrence in many...
Read More