At the weekend we went for a hike in Hout Bay. As well as great views (Signal Hill and the back of Table Mountain in the distance), I came across this strange plant. It is the flattest that I have seen yet! Any ideas on it?
Flattest yet!
About mol-d
Subscribe
5 Responses to Flattest yet!
Leave a Reply Click here to cancel reply.
-
Helen McNulty: Thank you so much Jamie, we have a lot of decision...
-
Minigarden SA: Hi Helen, a lot of importants comments were listed...
-
Antonet: I have one growing in a tree in my garden in Piete...
-
Helen McNulty: Thank you so much. You have given me much food for...
-
Manifesting Utopia: You could create an edible / salad wall (various c...
-
Companion Planting Competition
November 16, 2011
- How cool is spekboom? February 12, 2009
- Syringas March 11, 2009
-
Mystery plant
February 17, 2010
-
District 9 and what to do when you find an alien
January 19, 2010
-
Gardens Nursery
May 16, 2012
-
Which plants to use for a vertical garden?
May 14, 2012
-
‘Hope for our Wildflowers’
May 11, 2012
-
Heirloom tomatoes, on the vine
May 10, 2012
-
Zulu Palm
May 9, 2012
aloe
cactus
cape
Cape Town
climate change
COP17
durban
Durban Botanic Gardens
flower
flowers
food
fynbos
grass
greenpop
how to
indigenous
Indigenous Plant Fair
insects
invader
Karoo
kitchen garden
kwazulu-natal
Mining
organic
organic vegetables
permaculture
poaching
pot plant
recycling
sa blog awards
seeds
sodwana bay
soil
spekboom
succulent
sustainability
table mountain
transkei
travel
tree
water
wild dagga
wild garlic
worms
xolobeni
Follow @SPRIGBLOG on Twitter









A little book of nature?
hiding from the wind?
Wow! that really is a flattie.
OK it is a bulb. Hang on I’ll look it up. Maybe Boophane? Now renamed Crossyne. Parasol lily. Flowers after fire in March to April. Leaves follow in May. Maybe Haemanthus – April Fool. And there are other South African bulbs with that pair of leaves lying flat, trying to grow one in our garden. Same way of growing as the Namibian Welwitschia.
thanks elephant’s eye. could it be a Haemanthus pubescens?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haemanthus_pubescens