Kalanchoe marnieriana
Kalanchoe marnieriana (Marnier's Kalanchoe) Care Guide
Featured photokalanchoe-marnieriana.jpgKalanchoe marnieriana, sold as Marnier's Kalanchoe, is a member of *Kalanchoe*, a genus of about 125 succulent Crassulaceae mostly from Madagascar and tropical Africa. A Madagascan branching succulent with stacked rounded blue-green leaves on slender stems, leaves blushing pink along the margins in bright light. Forms cascading mounds when grown in hanging pots. Kalanchoe tolerates long dry spells, propagates readily from cuttings, and is one of the easiest succulent groups for indoor cultivation.
Care facts at a glance
- Light
- Bright indirect
- Water
- Water when the mix is fully dry.
- Humidity
- 30–50 %
- Temperature
- 15–27 °C
- Soil
- Free-draining cactus or succulent mix.
- Origin
- Madagascar and tropical Africa, with a few species across south-east Asia.
- Mature size
- 30 to 100 cm tall depending on species.
Overview
Kalanchoe marnieriana sits in Kalanchoe, a genus that radiated extensively across Madagascar — the island holds the bulk of the species. A Madagascan branching succulent with stacked rounded blue-green leaves on slender stems, leaves blushing pink along the margins in bright light. Forms cascading mounds when grown in hanging pots. Most cultivated kalanchoes share a strong tolerance of neglect, rapid propagation from cuttings, and a tendency to bloom heavily in late winter or early spring.
Care Priorities
- Bright filtered light or a few hours of direct morning sun.
- Water deeply when the mix is fully dry, then drain.
- Free-draining gritty mix.
- Cool dry winter rest encourages flowering.
Common Problems
Mushy stems are overwatering — almost always fatal once it spreads to the base. Wilted leaves on a dry plant recover quickly after a deep watering. Aphids cluster on flower stalks and are easy to dislodge with a strong water spray.
Sources & further reading (2)
- encyclopedia — accessed 2026-04-29
- botanical-garden — accessed 2026-04-29
Frequently asked questions
Why does this look like a Crassula?
K. marnieriana has stacked-leaf architecture similar to several Crassula species, and the two are sometimes confused at retail. The leaves on K. marnieriana are larger, paler blue-green, and produce dense pink flower clusters in spring — unlike Crassula it has the typical Kalanchoe flowering pattern.
How do I encourage flowering?
Most Kalanchoe set flower buds in response to long nights — a six-week period with about 14 hours of darkness each night reliably triggers blooming. A dark cupboard from early evening to morning works for indoor specimens.
Can I root broken pieces?
Yes — almost any leaf or stem fragment will root on dry succulent mix within a few weeks. Several Kalanchoe species (notably K. daigremontiana) even produce ready-rooted plantlets along their leaf margins.