This was first thought to be the Transvaal pelargonium. It does not, however, have the large lobed leaves of P. transvaalense, which are sporadically marked with purple rings and only occurs in nature in two high summer rainfall forest areas in Mpumalanga and KwaZulu-Natal respectively.
The flowers and leaves suggest that this may rather be P. radens that only grows in nature in the southern parts of South Africa, in the Little Karoo and the Baviaanskloof in the Eastern Cape.