Description
Thunbergia alata or black-eyed susan is a sought after garden creeper, a herbaceous perennial that grows fast and flowers much over a long summer season. Flowers have orange, yellow, white or nearly red corollas. Each of the five petals is bi-lobed. The corolla tube is purplish black or dark maroon. Leaves are ovate, arrow-tipped and sometimes serrated. The many branched stems will twine and climb like a vine over whatever is available and suitable.
Thunbergia alata grows in a wide range of soil types, does not need much watering, but may have to be cut back or even planted annually after winter frost. In nature it is found in the Eastern Cape and KZN coastal area and inland in Mpumalanga and Limpopo. It is common in several neighbouring countries and in tropical Africa. Although the plant is not invasive it has been naturalised on at least three continents apart from its African home base, viz. in north and south America and Australia. The habitat is forest margins and open bush, also in full sun (www.plantzafrica.com; Wikipedia).
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