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Description
ceropegia woodii succulent Ceropegia woodiiCeropegia woodii Ceropegia woodii is a trailing, tuberous geophyte with slender purple toned stems and small heart shaped leaves. The leaves are usually dark green to grey green above with silver marbling, while the undersides often show a purple tint. Its fine vines can hang from a pot, trail along a shelf or be guided around a small support. The plant stores water in thickened roots, a woody base and small aerial tubers that can form along the
Ceropegia woodii
Ceropegia woodii is a trailing, tuberous geophyte with slender purple-toned stems and small heart-shaped leaves. The leaves are usually dark green to grey-green above with silver marbling, while the undersides often show a purple tint. Its fine vines can hang from a pot, trail along a shelf or be guided around a small support.
The plant stores water in thickened roots, a woody base and small aerial tubers that can form along the stems. This storage habit shapes its care: it wants excellent drainage, deep watering followed by drying, and a slower winter dry-down when growth slows. Mature plants may also produce narrow lantern-shaped flowers in pale pink, purple and cream tones.
String of Hearts features
- Trailing or climbing tuberous geophyte from southern Africa
- Small heart-shaped leaves with silver marbling
- Fine purplish stems that can trail several metres with age
- Forms small aerial tubers along the vines
- Distinctive tubular flowers on mature, actively growing plants
Vines, tubers and flowering
Ceropegia woodii is native from Zimbabwe to South Africa and grows as a climbing tuberous geophyte in subtropical conditions. In habitat, its stems can scramble through surrounding vegetation, while in interiors it is usually grown as a hanging or trailing plant. The thin stems and small spaced leaves give it an open, delicate look, with each vine forming a visible chain of heart-shaped foliage.
The flowers are typical of Ceropegia, with a swollen base and a narrow tube ending in fused petal tips. They may appear mainly during active growth, especially on established vines with enough light and a stable root system.
Dry-down care for trailing String of Hearts
- Light: Position it in bright indirect light with some gentle direct sun. A bright windowsill with filtered sun keeps the gaps between leaves shorter and the silver pattern clearer.
- Watering: Give a full watering, then let most of the potting mix dry before the next round. The tubers and thickened roots are sensitive to wet, airless conditions.
- Substrate: Use a sharply draining succulent-style mix with mineral material such as pumice, perlite, grit or coarse sand.
- Pot choice: A pot with drainage holes is essential. Ceropegia woodii often grows well slightly snug, so oversized pots can hold moisture for too long.
- Temperature: Maintain about 18–26 °C during active growth and keep the plant above 15 °C indoors for steady growth.
- Humidity: Typical household humidity suits this species when the substrate drains well and the plant receives enough light.
- Feeding: Use reduced-strength fertiliser during active growth. Light feeding suits this slow, fine-stemmed plant.
- Winter watering: Reduce watering in winter as growth slows. Keep the vines in a bright position and allow longer drying between waterings.
- Pruning: Trim long vines to shape the plant or encourage a fuller pot. Cuttings can be rooted from healthy stem sections.
- Propagation: Propagate from stem cuttings, aerial tubers or tubers placed against lightly moist substrate. Keep propagation material warm and bright.
Vine and tuber warning signs
- Shrivelled leaves: Check the tubers and root zone. Dry, firm tubers usually need watering; soft or dark tubers point to rot.
- Yellowing vines: Inspect the potting mix for excess moisture, poor drainage or cold conditions. Let the plant dry and remove damaged stems.
- Long bare sections: Increase light gradually and trim back overly long vines to encourage fresh growth from higher nodes.
- Limited flowering: Mature vines need bright light, an active growth phase and a settled root zone. Repot only when necessary.
- Mealybugs: Check leaf bases, tubers and tangled stems. Isolate and treat early before pests spread through the vines.
Keeping long strands tidy
Ceropegia woodii can become very long with age, but its root system and tubers still prefer an airy, modest pot. The vines tangle easily, so handle the plant slowly during watering, shipping recovery or repotting. If a mature plant becomes sparse near the top, healthy cuttings can be rooted back into the pot to renew the crown.
Pet access and handling
Keep trailing strands out of reach of pets and children that may chew, pull or swallow plant material. The fine vines can snap easily when tugged, especially near tangled stems or aerial tubers.
Ceropegia name background
The accepted name is Ceropegia woodii Schltr., in the family Apocynaceae. The genus name Ceropegia comes from Greek roots often interpreted as “wax fountain,” referring to the unusual flower form. The species epithet woodii honours John Medley Wood, a collector of southern African plants.
Ceropegia woodii trails well from high planters, where its fine strands, heart-shaped leaves and tuber-forming stems can hang freely.
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