Succulent

Ox Tongue Gasteria

Gasteria bicolor · Asphodelaceae

Also called: Ox Tongue, Lawyer's Tongue, Cow Tongue, Gasteria

Ox Tongue Gasteria (Gasteria bicolor) is a low-water succulent well suited to Tucson and the low desert. It's a slow-growing succulent.

Ox Tongue Gasteria (Gasteria bicolor) growing in Tucson
Photo: Stan Shebs (CC BY-SA 3.0) · Wikimedia Commons

Ox Tongue Gasteria at a glance

Water use
Low (established)
Sun
Tolerates lower light than most succulents; prefers bright indirect light to light shade. In Tucson keep out of direct afternoon summer sun, which scorches the thick leaves-best in bright shade or indoors.
Mature size
Rosette/fan of leaves about 6-12 in tall, clumping
Growth rate
Slow
Bloom
Reddish to pink-and-green tubular flowers, Produces arching stalks of curved, stomach-shaped (hence 'Gasteria') tubular flowers mainly in spring.
Cold hardiness
Tender; protect below about 40 F. In Tucson grow as a container or indoor plant and shield from freezing temperatures.
Soil
Gritty, fast-draining cactus/succulent mix in a pot with drainage; avoid heavy moisture-retentive soil.
Native range
Eastern Cape, South Africa
Best used as
Indoor houseplant, Shaded-patio container, Dish gardens, Low-light succulent collections
Wildlife
Minor pollinator interest at bloom; chiefly an ornamental foliage succulent.
Toxicity
Generally regarded as non-toxic and pet-safe; a low-risk choice around cats, dogs, and children.

How to grow Ox Tongue Gasteria in Tucson & the low desert

Watering

Water deeply only when soil is dry, about every 2 weeks in the warm season and roughly monthly in winter. Very rot-prone if overwatered or kept wet; keep water out of the leaf crown.

Fertilizer & nutrients

Low feeder; a dilute balanced succulent fertilizer at half strength once or twice in spring-summer is adequate. Skip winter feeding.

Pruning & care

No pruning required; remove withered leaves and divide offsets to propagate clumps.

Notes

Gasteria bicolor (the variable form often includes plants once called G. lingua) has thick, tongue-like leaves marked with white spots. One of the more shade-tolerant succulents, making it well suited to bright interior spots or covered north/east patios in Tucson rather than open desert sun.

Sources: University of Arizona Cooperative Extension; PlantZAfrica / SANBI; World of Succulents (worldofsucculents.com)

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