Pelargonium radens is sometimes called the rasp-leaved pelargonium and the rondekantblaarmalva (round lace-leaved pelargonium) in Afrikaans. It has hairy leaves, elaborately lobed into a thin net-like structure and channelled along the axes. The roughly triangular leaf frames measure about 6 cm across. When crushed, the leaves exude a pungent scent, which is sometimes rose-like.
There is a widely marketed cultivar, the skeleton rose scented Geranium also known as P. radens “Dr Livingston” with several quaint aspects to its elaborate names, such as spelling and the idea of a rose skeleton.
This plant was photographed in October in the Harold Porter National Botanical Garden (Euston-Brown and Kruger, 2023; Vlok and Schutte-Vlok, 2015; iNaturalist; www.mountainvalleygrowers.com).