Winter Rain Gladiolus A-Z

Winter rain Gladiolus like their winters wet and mild and may need a dry summer dormancy. They are often less hardy, reaching down to USDA zone 8 at most.


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Gladiolus carneus F.Delaroche (syn. G. blandus Aiton ) has a wide distribution in the winter rainfall area of southern Africa and is found in a variety of habitats. It is a variable species that grows to about 50 cm with white to pink large flowers usually with dark spade shaped markings on the three lower lobes. It flowers late spring. This one seeds set very easily and also increases by cormlets. Photos taken in the wild, the first by Cameron McMaster in the Overberg and photos two and three by Andrew Harvie in Table Mountain National Park. Photo four is from the book Plants of the Klein Karoo courtesy of Jan and Anne Lise Schutte-Vlok. The last two photos are close-ups taken by Alan Horstmann.

Gladiolus carneus, Cameron McMasterGladiolus carneus, Table Mountain National Park, Andrew HarvieGladiolus carneus, Table Mountain National Park, Andrew HarvieGladiolus carneus, Jan and Anne Lise Schutte-VlokGladiolus carneus, Alan HorstmannGladiolus carneus, Alan Horstmann

The first photo was taken by Doug Westfall. The second one was taken June 2003 in Northern California of plants grown from seed, photo by Mary Sue Ittner. The third photo was taken by Jana Ulmer of plants grown from the same seed batch as the picture above. In 2004 both her population and Mary Sue's produced a lot of flowers that bloomed a very long time. Another form has been a reliable bloomer in our Northern California garden where it is planted in the ground and returns each year. Photo four by Bob Rutemoeller. Fifth photo is of an unmarked form, by Gordon Summerfield. Photo of seed on a 10 mm grid by David Pilling

Gladiolus carneus, Doug WestfallGladiolus carneus, Mary Sue IttnerGladiolus carneus, Jana UlmerGladiolus carneus, Bob RutemoellerGladiolus carneus, plain form, Gordon SummerfieldGladiolus carneus, David Pilling


Gladiolus caryophyllaceus (Burm.f.) Poir. grows on sandstone flats and slopes in the winter rainfall area, flowers winter to spring, and has large pink to mauve flowers that are speckled on the lower tepals and fragrant. Height range: 25-110 cm. This species has naturalized in Western Australia. The first four photos by Mary Sue Ittner, Bob Werra, and Alan Horstmann.

Gladiolus caryophyllaceus, Mary Sue IttnerGladiolus caryophyllaceus, Bob WerraGladiolus caryophyllaceus, Alan HorstmannGladiolus caryophyllaceus, Alan HorstmannGladiolus caryophyllaceus, Alan Horstmann

The first four habitat shots from Alan Horstmann were taken in the Western Cape. The last two habitat shots by Andrew Harvie were taken east of Koebeeberge in the Western Cape.

Gladiolus caryophyllaceus, Alan HorstmannGladiolus caryophyllaceus, Alan HorstmannGladiolus caryophyllaceus, Alan HorstmannGladiolus caryophyllaceus, Alan HorstmannGladiolus caryophyllaceus, Andrew HarvieGladiolus caryophyllaceus, Andrew Harvie


Gladiolus ceresianus L.Bolus grows on stony slopes and flats in clay soil from southern Namaqualand to the western Karoo and in the Roggeveld and Bokkeveld Plateau. It is a small plant, up to 10 cm tall with linear leaves with four longitudinal grooves and one to four flowers in a inclined spike that are brown to purple with dark veining. Flowers are pleasantly scented. This species flowers from August to October in the wild. Flowers are similar to Gladiolus uysiae, but that species has flat leaves. It is also very similar to Gladiolus virescens, but has dark, hard scales around the corms. Photo 1 from Cameron McMaster taken on the Matjiesfontein Sutherland road in the Roggeveld, photo 2 from Alan Horstmann, and photo 3 from Rod Saunders. The last two photos from the book Plants of the Klein Karoo courtesy of Jan and Anne Lise Schutte-Vlok.

Gladiolus ceresianus, Roggeveld, Cameron McMasterGladiolus ceresianus, Alan HorstmannGladiolus ceresianus, Rod SaundersGladiolus ceresianus, Jan and Anne Lise Schutte-VlokGladiolus ceresianus, Jan and Anne Lise Schutte-Vlok

Gladiolus comptonii G.J.Lewis is a rare plant that grows on rocky sandstone slopes in the northwest Cape in a localized area on Heerenlogement Mountain at the northwestern end of the Olifants River Mountains. Plants grow 45 to 60 cm high. The leaves are linear and the few bright yellow short tubed flowers have brown streaks on the lower tepals. This species flowers mid to late July (winter). Photo taken by Rachel Saunders.

Gladiolus comptonii, Rachel Saunders


Gladiolus crispulatus L. Bolus is a rare endemic that is found in the Southwestern Cape on south facing slopes between Swellendam and Riversdale. Growing to 30-40 cm, it has four or five superposed leaves, with the midribs lightly thickened and usually paired on one side and single on the other, and deep pink flowers with triangular median streaks and dark spots in the throat. It is similar to Gladiolus oreocharis but has larger flowers and different leaves and to Gladiolus carneus which also has different leaves and tepal markings. If flowers November-December, but usually only in the first several years after a fire so is rarely seen. The first photograph from Rachel Saunders was taken close to the top of the Langeberg Mountains. The next photos from iNaturalist were taken by Brian du Preez in November in the Western Cape and lennartn in November near Swellendam and shared under CC BY-SA and CC BY-NC licenses.

Gladiolus crispulatus, Rachel SaundersGladiolus crispulatus, Brian du Preez, iNaturalist, CC BY-SAGladiolus crispulatus, lennartn, iNaturalist, CC BY-NCGladiolus crispulatus, lennartn, iNaturalist, CC BY-NCGladiolus crispulatus, lennartn, iNaturalist, CC BY-NC


Gladiolus cunonius (Linnaeus) Gaertner (syns. Anomalesia cunonia, Antholyza cunonia) has bright red flowers and blooms in the spring and grows in sandy soils near the coast. Plants grow from 20-70 cm high. The first three photos were taken by Bob Rutemoeller and Mary Sue Ittner and the next three by Cameron McMaster in habitat near Agulhas and Arniston in the Overberg. The last picture shows the seed capsules hanging over the cliff near the ocean.

Gladiolus cunonius, Bob RutemoellerGladiolus cunonius, Bob RutemoellerGladiolus cunonius, Mary Sue IttnerGladiolus cunonius, Agulhas, Cameron McMasterGladiolus cunonius, Arniston, Cameron McMasterGladiolus cunonius seed capsules, Cameron McMaster


Gladiolus cylindraceus G.J.Lewis grows on rocky sandstone slopes and ridges in low fynbos vegetation at elevations above 1500 m in the Ceres District of the Southwest Cape. Growing to 50 cm, it has three distinctive linear leaves with the lower one or two basal and the lowermost reaching to between the base and apex of the spike, sheathing the stem and cross shaped in transverse with wide grooves. The unscented flowers are pale pink to salmon with a diamond shaped red mark sometimes with a white to yellow center on the lower tepals. The tube is slender and elongate, up to 52 mm long. It flowers December to January. Photos from Rod Saunders and Rachel Saunders. The first was taken on the Waboomsberg Mountain and the others in the Witsenberg Mountains where there were flowers in colors from pink to apricot to almost yellow.

Gladiolus cylindraceus, Rachel SaundersGladiolus cylindraceus habitat, Witsenberg, Rod SaundersGladiolus cylindraceus, Witsenberg, R. SaundersGladiolus cylindraceus, Witsenberg, R. SaundersGladiolus cylindraceus, Witsenberg, R. Saunders


Gladiolus debilis Ker Gawler is found on rocky sandstone slopes in the southwest Cape, blooming in spring with white to pale pink flowers with red markings on the lower tepals. Height range: 25-45 cm. The first photo by Mary Sue Ittner was taken in September 2001 in an area in the southwest Cape that had burned the year previously and the second was taken by Bob Rutemoeller September 2003 at Boskloof. The third was taken by Ragnhild Crawford. Photos four and five taken near Napier in the Overberg by Cameron McMaster. The sixth photo was taken by Andrew Harvie at Silvermine in Table Mountain National Park. Last photo by Christopher Whitehouse taken at the Phillpskop Mountain Reserve near Stanford.

Gladiolus debilis, Mary Sue IttnerGladiolus debilis, Boskloof, Bob RutemoellerGladiolus debilis, Boskloof, Ragnhild CrawfordGladiolus debilis, Napier, Cameron McMasterGladiolus debilis, Napier, Cameron McMasterGladiolus debilis, Silvermine, Andrew HarvieGladiolus debilis, Christopher Whitehouse


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