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Plant care

Achimenes 'Tarantella' (tarantella achimenes) care

Achimenes 'Tarantella'

Also called tarantella achimenes.

RHS H1bUSDA 9-11Pet-safeIndoor About 30-45 cm long with a generous cascading spread when grown in a basket and pinched.

Watering rhythm

4-6days

Keep evenly moist in growth, roughly every 4-6 days

Light

Bright indirect light (just back from a sunny window)

Soil

Light, humus-rich, free-draining mix

Humidity

50-70%

Temp

18-27°C

Pet safety

Pet-safe

Mature size

About 30-45 cm long with a generous cascading spread when grown in a basket and pinched.

Care at a glance

Light

Achimenes 'Tarantella' is what florists mean by "bright spot, no direct sun" — close enough to a south or east window to feel the brightness, with a sheer curtain or a few feet of distance keeping the sun off the leaves. Bright, filtered light maximises flowering; an east window or sheer-shaded brighter aspect is ideal. Avoid harsh direct sun, which scorches the soft leaves and shortens flower life. A phone lux-meter at the leaf surface should read 1,500-3,000 lux at noon.

Watering

Water achimenes 'tarantella' keep evenly moist in growth, roughly every 4-6 days. The actual day count varies with pot size, light, and season — the finger test (or lifting the pot to feel its weight) is more reliable than a fixed calendar. Empty any drainage saucer afterwards so the pot isn't sitting in water. Never allow the soil to dry out during active growth, which can force early dormancy. Use tepid, room-temperature water and keep it off the hairy foliage to avoid spotting.

Soil and pot

Achimenes 'Tarantella' grows best in light, humus-rich, free-draining mix. A peat/coir African violet-style blend with perlite and leaf mould retains moisture while draining freely, guarding the delicate rhizomes against rot. A pot with a working drainage hole is non-negotiable for this species — even free-draining mix will turn soggy in a closed planter. If you love the look of a decorative pot without a hole, use it as a cachepot around an inner nursery pot you can lift out to water.

Humidity and temperature

Achimenes 'Tarantella' sits happiest at around 50-70% humidity and 18-27°C (65-80°F). Thrives in humid air that keeps buds plump and leaf edges crisp-free. Provide humidity with trays, grouping, or a humidifier rather than misting the soft leaves. If you keep the room above 18 year-round and avoid placing the plant near a cold draught, a hot radiator, or an air-conditioning vent, you have already handled the two biggest indoor stressors.

Fertilising

Feed achimenes 'tarantella' sparingly. Feed every 1-2 weeks in the growing season with a dilute balanced or high-potash liquid feed at quarter to half strength. Cease feeding once the foliage yellows and the plant enters dormancy. Skip fertiliser entirely on a stressed, recently-repotted, or actively wilting plant — fertiliser salts make damage worse, not better. Wait for a round of healthy new growth before resuming a feeding rhythm.

Common problems

Below are the issues we see most often on achimenes 'tarantella' in the Growli community. Each is annotated with the most common cause so you know where to start.

  • Premature dormancyCold spells or letting the mix dry out can halt growth early. Keep warmth and even moisture through summer to extend the bloom season.
  • Brown leaf edgesDry, low-humidity air scorches the thin margins. Raise ambient humidity and shield from hot drafts and direct sun.
  • Sparse floweringLow light or too much nitrogen favours leaves over blooms. Give bright indirect light and switch to a high-potash bloom feed in summer.
  • Rhizome rot in storageDormant rhizomes rot if stored damp. Keep them barely moist in dry peat or vermiculite in a cool, frost-free spot until spring.

Propagation

Divide the scaly rhizomes at spring repotting; each segment regrows. Also propagated from stem-tip cuttings and detached rhizome scales started in warm, moist, airy mix under humidity. Propagation is the cheapest, most satisfying way to expand a collection — and it doubles as insurance against losing a mature plant to an accident. Take a backup cutting once the parent is established and healthy.

Toxicity to pets

Achimenes 'Tarantella' is pet-safe. Pet-safe per ASPCA: Achimenes (hot water plant, Cupid's bower) is documented as non-toxic to cats and dogs on ASPCA-referenced plant lists, and its family Gesneriaceae includes ASPCA-confirmed non-toxic relatives (Tree Gloxinia/Kohleria, African violet). No toxic principle is reported. If you keep cats, dogs, or curious children in the house, weigh placement carefully — a high shelf or a hanging planter is enough for casual safety. For severe ingestion incidents, call your local vet and the ASPCA Animal Poison Control Center (in the US, 888-426-4435).

Pet-safety status is sourced from the ASPCA Toxic and Non-Toxic Plant List, which catalogues the most-asked-about plants for cats, dogs, and horses.

Achimenes 'Tarantella' care — frequently asked questions

What is the common name for Achimenes 'Tarantella'?

Achimenes 'Tarantella' is most commonly called Achimenes 'Tarantella', but it is also known as tarantella achimenes. The names refer to the same species, so care instructions for Achimenes 'Tarantella' apply identically to anything sold as tarantella achimenes.

How much light does achimenes 'tarantella' need?

Achimenes 'Tarantella' grows best in bright indirect light (just back from a sunny window). Bright, filtered light maximises flowering; an east window or sheer-shaded brighter aspect is ideal. Avoid harsh direct sun, which scorches the soft leaves and shortens flower life.

How often should I water achimenes 'tarantella'?

Water achimenes 'tarantella' keep evenly moist in growth, roughly every 4-6 days. Never allow the soil to dry out during active growth, which can force early dormancy. Use tepid, room-temperature water and keep it off the hairy foliage to avoid spotting. The finger-test (or lifting the pot to feel its weight) beats a fixed weekly calendar because pot size, light, and season all change how fast the soil dries.

Is achimenes 'tarantella' toxic to cats and dogs?

Achimenes 'Tarantella' is pet-safe. Pet-safe per ASPCA: Achimenes (hot water plant, Cupid's bower) is documented as non-toxic to cats and dogs on ASPCA-referenced plant lists, and its family Gesneriaceae includes ASPCA-confirmed non-toxic relatives (Tree Gloxinia/Kohleria, African violet). No toxic principle is reported.

What USDA hardiness zone does achimenes 'tarantella' grow in?

Achimenes 'Tarantella' is rated for USDA zone 9-11 (lifted/stored dormant elsewhere) and RHS hardiness H1b. Outside that range, grow it as a container plant that overwinters indoors before the first hard frost.

Achimenes 'Tarantella' deep-dive guides

Every aspect of achimenes 'tarantella' care, each with its own calibrated guide:

Featured in these plant shortlists

Achimenes 'Tarantella' qualifies for 11 curated Growli shortlists — each one filtered objectively from our structured plant-care library, so the selection is consistent and checkable:

Related guides

Achimenes 'Tarantella' is also commonly called tarantella achimenes.