It is one of the most unusual of the Gasteria species, as it grows long leafy stems of up to 2 meters, which often hang down. It is also unusual in that its leaves are sometimes edged with tiny black teeth, unlike other Gasteria species.
One variety has distichous leaves, while in another the leaves spiral.
The inflorescences have pink flowers, and appear throughout the year, but mainly in Spring (between August and October).
Here it tends to grow hanging on cliff faces in shady ravines, growing in well-drained sandstone soils, usually on the shady south-facing cliffs. Rainfall is sparse (c.200–300 mm per annum), and occurs slightly more in the summer. The surrounding habitat is Albany thicket.
It has become popular in cultivation, as a slow-growing ornamental plant, for semi-shade landscaping.[1]
Phylogeny
Recent phylogenetic studies have suggested that this species, with the smallest genome of any member of Gasteria, is likely a unique and primitive outlier in the genus, relatively distinct from the other species.
This possibility is supported by its natural habitat being in the centre of the wider distribution of Gasteria, and by a range of other differences that make this species unique in its genus. It is unique in its growth habit; its leaves are sometimes toothed; it does not easily propagate by leaf-cuttings; and it has no leaf maculation.[2]
Natural varieties
Natural variation in the wild have resulted in several cultivars:
"Staircase" plants have a gently spiral to their leaf arrangement, looking like a spiral staircase.
"Geelhoutboskloof" plants, named after the cliff they come from, have a spiral leaf pattern, but with large hard prickles, and a lax inflorescence.
"Gert Smitskloof" plants, also named after their origin, have highly compact, short leaves, with hardly any teeth