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Othonna capensis

Othonna capensis (Little Pickles) Care Guide

Updated by Funfactorium Editorial1 min readFor fun · sources cited
Photo: Kurt Stüber [1] · CC BY-SA 3.0
In short

Othonna capensis, sold as Little Pickles, is a member of the *Curio* / *Senecio* / *Othonna* group of succulent Asteraceae from southern Africa. A South African trailing succulent with cylindrical bright green or purple-tinged leaves on slender pink stems, forming dense cascades over pot edges. Produces tiny daisy-like yellow flowers across the year. Modern taxonomy has separated several former *Senecio* succulents into the genus *Curio*, but plants are still commonly sold under the older Senecio names at retail.

Care facts at a glance

Light
Bright indirect
Water
Water deeply when the mix is fully dry, typically every 2 to 3 weeks.
Humidity
30–50 %
Temperature
10–27 °C
Soil
Free-draining cactus or succulent mix with extra perlite or pumice.
Origin
Southern Africa, mostly the Western and Eastern Cape and Namibia.
Mature size
Trailing stems to 60 cm or more in mature plants.

Overview

Othonna capensis sits in the broader Curio/Senecio/Othonna succulent radiation across southern Africa. A South African trailing succulent with cylindrical bright green or purple-tinged leaves on slender pink stems, forming dense cascades over pot edges. Produces tiny daisy-like yellow flowers across the year. The succulent leaves and trailing stems are an adaptation to the seasonally dry Cape habitats where most species grow. Modern molecular work has split the leafy-succulent species into Curio and the bulb-like ones into Othonna, but retail labels still mix the genus names freely.

Care Priorities

  • Bright filtered light or a few hours of direct morning sun.
  • Free-draining gritty mix; sustained moisture rots the roots.
  • Water deeply, then let the mix dry fully.
  • Cool dry winter rest below 15 °C encourages flowering.

Common Problems

Stretched stems are insufficient light. Mushy base is overwatering. Aphids cluster on flower buds and are easy to dislodge with a strong water spray. Many species drop older leaves naturally as part of the seasonal rest cycle.

Sources & further reading (2)
  1. encyclopedia — accessed 2026-04-29
  2. botanical-garden — accessed 2026-04-29

Frequently asked questions

Why are the leaves sometimes purple?

O. capensis leaves flush purple in bright direct sun and cool nights, deepening to almost black under stress. Plants in shaded conditions stay pure green. The purple pigmentation is a stress response, not pigmentation lost or gained permanently.

Are these really Senecio or Curio?

Modern molecular taxonomy has split the succulent species formerly in *Senecio* into a separate genus *Curio*, alongside the unchanged true *Senecio* and the bulb-like *Othonna*. Retail labels often still use the older Senecio names, which is why both names appear on plant tags.

Can I propagate from broken stems?

Yes — stem cuttings root readily. Snap a healthy stem at a node, let the cut callus for a day or two, and lay the cutting on dry succulent mix. Roots typically appear within two to three weeks.

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