Costus fissiligulatus 'African Princess'
Spiral Ginger 'African Princess'
Costus is a tropical fleshy-leafed perennial plant, the leaves spiralling up the stem. In Summer it bears cone-shaped inflorescences with small flowers around. The plants can grow quite large, depending on the variety. In areas that do not have a tropical climate they will need to be grown indoors. 'African Princess' bears pink, open-faced blooms with a yellow throat on a 3-4' plant
-
Full sun to partial shade
-
Frequent watering
-
Not Frost hardy
-
Free draining and fertile
Common name
Spiral Ginger 'African Princess'
Latin name
Costus fissiligulatus 'African Princess'
type
Rhizomatous perennial
family
Costaceae
ph
6.0 - 7.5 Acid - Neutral
Plant & bloom calendar
-
Best time to plant
-
When the plant will bloom
full grown dimensions
Costus fissiligulatus 'African Princess'
Costus is a tropical fleshy-leafed perennial plant, the leaves spiralling up the stem. In Summer it bears cone-shaped inflorescences with small flowers around. The plants can grow quite large, depending on the variety. In areas that do not have a tropical climate they will need to be grown indoors. 'African Princess' bears pink, open-faced blooms with a yellow throat on a 3-4' plant
Flowering
From Early Summer TO Late Summer
The exotic-looking cone-shaped flowers appear through Summer
Planting
From Early Spring TO Late Spring
Costus likes moist, free-draining soil. In anywhere other than tropical climates they will need to be grown indoors. Container-grown plants will need annual re-potting
Propagating by division of rhizomes
From Early Spring TO Early Spring
The rhizomes can be divided in winter to extract new plants. Dig up the whole clump, or a section of the clump, (or remove from the pot), and shake off the soil. You will see a clump of fleshy rhizomes with many shoots. Remove any dead or unhealthy rhizomes, and divide the rest, making sure each division has at least two or three shoots. Re-plant immediately.