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Streptocarpus saxorum

Streptocarpus saxorum (False African Violet) Care Guide

Updated by Funfactorium Editorial1 min readFor fun · sources cited
Photo: Avi1111 dr. avishai teicher · CC BY-SA 3.0
In short

Streptocarpus saxorum, sold as False African Violet, is a member of *Streptocarpus*, an African gesneriad genus of about 175 species closely related to African violets. A Tanzanian and Kenyan trailing Streptocarpus with small rounded fuzzy grey-green leaves and slender stems carrying lilac trumpet flowers. Differs from rosette species by its branching trailing habit. Streptocarpus tolerates lower light than most flowering houseplants and produces successive flushes of trumpet-shaped flowers across the year when given consistent care.

Care facts at a glance

Light
Bright indirect
Water
Water when the top 2 cm of mix has dried, then water at the soil only.
Humidity
40–70 %
Temperature
15–24 °C
Soil
Light, free-draining gesneriad mix with peat or coir and extra perlite for aeration.
Origin
Eastern and southern Africa, with the centre of diversity in the Drakensberg mountains and KwaZulu-Natal.
Mature size
15 to 30 cm tall and wide.

Overview

Streptocarpus saxorum sits in Streptocarpus (Gesneriaceae), a genus closely related to African violets and centred on the eastern slopes of the Drakensberg. A Tanzanian and Kenyan trailing Streptocarpus with small rounded fuzzy grey-green leaves and slender stems carrying lilac trumpet flowers. Differs from rosette species by its branching trailing habit. Modern molecular taxonomy has folded the former Saintpaulia (African violet) into Streptocarpus, so the cape primroses and African violets are now technically congeneric.

Care Priorities

  • Bright filtered light; direct sun bleaches the leaves.
  • Water when the top 2 cm of mix has dried — never let the crown sit wet.
  • High humidity (above 50 percent) keeps the foliage crisp.
  • Feed lightly and often during flowering.

Common Problems

Wilting with moist soil indicates root rot. Brown crown is overwatering at the centre — water at the soil edge only. Pale or scorched leaves are too much direct sun. Failure to flower is usually low light.

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

Frequently asked questions

Why does S. saxorum trail rather than form a rosette?

S. saxorum is one of the few branching, trailing Streptocarpus — most species form ground-hugging rosettes. The trailing habit makes it well suited to hanging baskets where the lilac flowers are displayed at eye level.

Can I propagate from a single leaf?

Yes — Streptocarpus is one of the easiest plants to propagate from leaves. Cut a healthy leaf in half along the midrib and stand each half cut-edge-down in moist propagation mix; multiple plantlets emerge along the cut within a few weeks.

How do I keep the flowers coming?

Streptocarpus blooms best with steady moisture, bright filtered light, and regular dilute feeding. Pinch off spent flower stalks at the base to encourage new bud production rather than seed-set.

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