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Sansevieria Fernwood

Sansevieria Fernwood (Fernwood Snake Plant) Care Guide

Updated by Funfactorium Editorial1 min readFor fun · sources cited
Photo: 999real — approximate match (genus-only) · CC0
In short

Sansevieria Fernwood, sold as Fernwood Snake Plant, is a Sansevieria (now technically *Dracaena*) from tropical Africa, with stiff leaves rising directly from a creeping underground rhizome. A cultivar group with narrow cylindrical green leaves marked in subtle horizontal banding, on stiffly upright clumps reaching 60 cm tall. Often sold as a hybrid between S. parva and S. suffruticosa. Like most Sansevieria it tolerates long dry spells, low light, and irregular watering, which is why the group remains a staple of office and beginner-friendly plant lists.

Care facts at a glance

Light
Bright indirect
Water
Water deeply when the mix is fully dry, typically every 3 to 4 weeks.
Humidity
20–50 %
Temperature
15–27 °C
Soil
Free-draining cactus or succulent mix with extra perlite.
Origin
Tropical Africa, Madagascar, and southern Asia — most cultivated species are West or East African.
Mature size
30 to 120 cm tall depending on species.

Overview

Sansevieria Fernwood was placed in Sansevieria until molecular studies in 2017 folded the genus into Dracaena. A cultivar group with narrow cylindrical green leaves marked in subtle horizontal banding, on stiffly upright clumps reaching 60 cm tall. Often sold as a hybrid between S. parva and S. suffruticosa. Plants are still widely sold under the older Sansevieria names at retail, and growers tend to use both names interchangeably. The species spreads by stout creeping rhizomes that push new leaf clusters at intervals.

Care Priorities

  • Bright filtered light to medium light; tolerates lower light than most cultivated foliage.
  • Free-draining cactus mix.
  • Water deeply, then let the mix dry fully — overwatering is the leading killer.
  • Tolerates very irregular care; almost impossible to under-water.

Common Problems

Soft mushy base is overwatering and is usually fatal once it spreads to the rhizome. Wrinkled leaves on a dry plant recover slowly — water deeply once the mix is fully dry. Brown leaf tips are usually old age and harmless.

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

Frequently asked questions

What species is 'Fernwood'?

'Fernwood' is a cultivated hybrid in the Sansevieria/Dracaena trifasciata complex, often credited to a cross between S. parva and S. suffruticosa. The cultivar produces narrow cylindrical leaves with delicate horizontal banding and is more compact than the typical S. cylindrica.

Is this Sansevieria or Dracaena?

Modern taxonomy folded *Sansevieria* into *Dracaena* based on molecular phylogenetic studies published in 2017. Plants are still very widely sold under the older Sansevieria names; both names refer to the same plants. The trade has been slow to migrate to the new names because the older ones are so well established.

Can I propagate from a leaf cutting?

Yes — most Sansevieria root readily from leaf segments. Cut a healthy leaf into 5 cm sections, let each section callus for a day or two, and push the bottom cut-edge into dry succulent mix. Roots typically appear within a month and a small leaf cluster follows.

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