The Afrikaans names of doringkopmalva (thorn head pelargonium) or dikstammalva (thick stem pelargonium) are both descriptive of the plant: At the onset of summer drought the leaves fall, exposing the prominent succulent stems. After flowering the long dry stalks of old blooms persist, sometimes in an untidy mesh resembling spines or thorns covering the top of the plant.
This latter feature distinguishes Pelargonium crithmifolium from a similar species, P. carnosum that has comparable stems and much divided grey-green leaves, but smaller flowers and flower stalks that do not persist.
P. crithmifolium leaves are fleshy. Their petioles are furrowed along the upper sides. Leaves are crowded at the tips of branches. The stems are usually somewhat swollen at the nodes. The narrow, divided leaves grow on longish petioles. The plants are generally slow growers, particularly when plants are cultivated from seed (Vlok and Schutte-Vlok, 2015; Le Roux, 2005; iNaturalist; https://www.llifle.com).