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Description
strelitzia potting mix Strelitzia reginae – Foliage FactoryStrelitzia reginae Strelitzia reginae is the classic orange bird of paradise, grown indoors for its upright fan of firm grey green leaves and orange blue flowers on mature plants. The foliage rises from a basal crown, giving the plant a herbaceous, clump forming structure. Even when it is not flowering, the plant has a clear fan shape from the way each leaf stands in line with the next. Its fleshy roots and rhizome need drainage, warmth and strong
Strelitzia reginae
Strelitzia reginae is the classic orange bird of paradise, grown indoors for its upright fan of firm grey-green leaves and orange-blue flowers on mature plants. The foliage rises from a basal crown, giving the plant a herbaceous, clump-forming structure.
Even when it is not flowering, the plant has a clear fan shape from the way each leaf stands in line with the next. Its fleshy roots and rhizome need drainage, warmth and strong light, with thorough watering followed by partial drying in the root zone.
Strelitzia reginae fan growth and flowers
- Plant type: Evergreen, rhizomatous Strelitziaceae with upright leaves from a basal crown.
- Leaves: Firm grey-green blades with a broad banana-like shape and a fan-like arrangement.
- Growth habit: Tufted and clump-forming, with herbaceous growth from the base.
- Roots: Fleshy roots need a potting mix that drains cleanly and does not stay cold and wet.
- Flowers: Mature plants can produce orange sepals and blue-purple petals from a boat-shaped bract.
- Indoor behaviour: Flowering indoors depends on plant age, strong light and enough root space.
- Pot choice: A stable pot keeps the upright leaf fan balanced as the crown widens.
Basal crown structure in Strelitzia reginae
Strelitzia reginae is native to South Africa, from the Cape Provinces to KwaZulu-Natal. It grows as a subtropical perennial with leaves arranged from a low crown and a root system built to store energy through fleshy underground parts.
In a pot, that structure allows the plant to hold a firm upright shape when light is bright enough. Lower light can stretch the petioles and slow new leaf production, while very wet substrate around the fleshy roots can lead to yellowing or soft growth. Strong filtered light keeps new leaves firmer and helps the crown stay more compact.
Care for Strelitzia reginae roots and leaves
- Light: Place in very bright filtered light. A brighter position is especially important if mature flowering is expected later.
- Watering: Water deeply, then wait until the upper substrate has partly dried before watering again.
- Humidity: Normal indoor humidity is usually accepted, though very dry air can mark older leaf tips.
- Temperature: Keep warm and protect from cold draughts, frost and cold wet substrate.
- Substrate: Use an airy, free-draining mix that gives the fleshy roots oxygen between waterings.
- Repotting: Repot when the crown becomes unstable, the substrate breaks down or roots fill the pot.
- Feeding: Feed moderately during active growth. Flush the substrate occasionally if fertiliser salts build up.
- Cleaning: Wipe dust from the broad leaves and remove old leaf stalks close to the base.
Flowering, root rot and pests on Strelitzia reginae
- No flowers indoors: Young plants and plants in lower light often remain foliage-only for a long time.
- Root rot: Wet, compact soil can damage the fleshy root system and cause yellowing or collapse.
- Leaf spots: Brown or yellow patches can appear when leaves stay stressed, wet or poorly ventilated.
- Pests: Mealybugs, scale and spider mites may hide around petiole bases and leaf undersides.
- Brown leaf tips: Dry air, inconsistent watering or old leaf age can all contribute to browning tips.
Strelitzia reginae safety
Strelitzia reginae is not pet-safe. Keep it out of reach of cats, dogs and other animals that may chew leaves, flowers, fruit or seeds.
Name origin of Strelitzia reginae
The genus Strelitzia honours Queen Charlotte of Mecklenburg-Strelitz. The species epithet reginae means “of the queen”, so both parts of the name point back to the same royal connection. The bird of paradise common name comes from the mature flower structure, where bright orange and blue parts rise from a firm boat-shaped bract.
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