Labisia Pumila Blume Pink
Labisia Pumila, widely known throughout Malaysia and Indonesia as Kacip Fatimah ("Fatimah's betel cutter"), is a small understory herb native to Peninsular Malaysia, Sumatra, Java, and Borneo — including the Kapuas Hulu region of West Kalimantan this specimen was collected from. It grows in low clusters with mostly unbranched, hairy stems, producing oblong, finely toothed leaves 15–35 cm long with a thick midrib and parallel venation.
Note: as a freshly imported bare-root plant, this specimen typically arrives with just a few leaves — the photo shows a more mature, fuller specimen for reference.
Care tip: This species is genuinely sensitive to microclimate shifts — sudden changes in light intensity, temperature, or humidity can stress it, so aim for stable, consistent conditions rather than frequent adjustment.
Give it low to medium filtered light (it grows naturally on shaded forest floor, away from direct sun), consistently moist, humus-rich or loamy soil, and warm, stable temperatures. In its native range this species carries genuine cultural weight — known as the "women's tongkat ali," it has centuries of use in traditional Malay and Indonesian medicine, particularly around women's health, and remains the subject of ongoing phytochemical research.
Few Southeast Asian understory plants carry as much traditional and commercial significance as Kacip Fatimah — a genuinely storied species behind an unassuming, low-growing forest herb.
Care & Specifications
| Difficulty |
Intermediate |
| Light |
Low to medium filtered light; no direct sun |
| Humidity |
60–80% |
| Watering |
Keep consistently moist; avoid waterlogging |
| Temperature |
70–85°F (21–29°C); avoid sudden fluctuations |
| Soil |
Moist, humus-rich or loamy soil |
| Fertilizer |
Diluted balanced fertilizer during active growth |
| Origin |
Hulu Kapuas, West Kalimantan, Indonesian Borneo |