FRITHIA PULCHRA are exceedingly rare
as they only grow on a strip only about 200m wide and 150km long
along the top of the Magaliesberg mountains, in the North West Province
(was Transvaal) of South Africa.
| |
The antelope on the next photograph
is a water buck. | |
| |
|
In the summer they will receive their water from thunder showers, so they get soaked about once a month and dry out completely in-between, with temperatures in the low 30's (around 90°F) not uncommon. In the dry winters, temperatures go below zero Celsius at night, rising to 20-25°C (68-76°F) during the day. This is a summer rain fall area and receives
little or no rainfall for the 6 months around winter. Frithias are in
bloom at the moment.
![]() Locally they are known as fairy elephants
foot.
Perhaps you have trouble in keeping
Frithia pulchra alive if you water it in
winter.
Frank de Wilde
South Africa |
Desert Tropicals Home Page | Bulletin Board | Order the CD | Tell your friends about this page
© 2002 Frank de Wilde, All Rights Reserved.