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How to Grow Sadabahar (Periwinkle / Vinca) in India: Complete Care Guide
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How to Grow Sadabahar (Periwinkle / Vinca) in India: Complete Care Guide

Sadabahar (periwinkle, vinca) blooms non-stop in 40°C+ Indian summer heat when almost everything else wilts. This India guide covers pot setup, sun, watering, why sadabahar stops flowering, monsoon care, propagation from cuttings, and the Ayurvedic context that makes it unique.

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Terakhir diperbarui: May 6, 2026
SG

Sarah Green

Horticulturist and garden expert with 15+ years of experience growing vegetables, herbs, and houseplants. Certified Master Gardener.

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How to Grow Sadabahar (Periwinkle / Vinca) in India: Complete Care Guide

Sadabahar (Catharanthus roseus) — called periwinkle, vinca, or baaraa-maasee in some regions — earns its name: sadabahar means "ever-blooming." It is the plant that keeps flowering on your balcony in May when your roses are wilting and your petunias have given up.

If you have seen flat, low-growing plants covered in pink, white, red, or bicolored flowers on a terrace or roadside garden in Indian summer, you have seen sadabahar. It is everywhere, for good reason: it is genuinely one of the easiest and most rewarding summer plants you can grow in India.

Quick Facts

DetailInfo
Botanical NameCatharanthus roseus
Common NamesSadabahar, periwinkle, vinca, baaraa-maasee, nityakalyani (Telugu)
FamilyApocynaceae
Plant TypeTender perennial (treated as annual in some climates)
Mature Size20–60 cm tall; spreading to 45–60 cm wide
Sun ExposureFull sun — 6+ hours direct sun for best flowering
Soil TypeWell-draining; not too rich
Bloom SeasonYear-round in South India; March–November in North India
WateringModerate; drought-tolerant once established
DifficultyBeginner — one of the most forgiving flowering plants
ToxicityToxic if ingested; handle with care

Why Sadabahar Thrives in Indian Summer

Most flowering plants shut down in Indian summer heat. Sadabahar does not — and the reason is worth understanding:

  1. Native to Madagascar: Catharanthus roseus evolved in a hot, seasonally dry tropical island. Indian summer temperatures (35–45°C) are within its natural range.
  2. Heat triggers flowering: Unlike many flowers that stop blooming in extreme heat, sadabahar actually blooms most freely when temperatures are high and the sun is intense.
  3. Drought-tolerant mechanism: The plant can slow down under extended drought but recovers quickly once watering resumes. It does not die from missing a watering or two.
  4. Low water requirement: In Indian summer, sadabahar needs significantly less water than marigolds, petunias, or begonias.

The main failure point for Indian growers: overwatering and shade. A sadabahar in shade does not bloom. A sadabahar in waterlogged soil gets root rot. Get sun and drainage right, and it almost takes care of itself.

Pot and Soil Setup

Container Size

A single plant needs a minimum 6-inch (15 cm) pot. For a full, bushy display, use an 8–10 inch (20–25 cm) pot. Sadabahar grows happily in window boxes, hanging baskets, and ground beds — as long as drainage is excellent.

Soil Mix for Indian Conditions

Sadabahar does not want rich, moisture-retaining soil. A lean, fast-draining mix works best:

  • 50% regular garden soil or red soil
  • 30% coarse river sand or perlite
  • 20% compost or vermicompost

Avoid: Coco peat as the primary medium (retains too much moisture). Heavy black cotton soil. Any mix that stays wet for more than 2 days after watering.

Sunlight: Non-Negotiable

Sadabahar needs full sun — 6+ hours of direct sunlight daily.

This is the single most important factor for flowering. In shade or partial sun:

  • Flowering dramatically reduces or stops
  • Stems become leggy and thin
  • The plant becomes more susceptible to pests

Best positions: South-facing or west-facing balconies. East-facing works well in summer. Rooftop terraces are ideal.

If your balcony gets only 4–5 hours of sun, sadabahar will survive but won't give the dense, continuous flowering it is capable of.

Watering Schedule for India

Summer (March–June)

Water when the top 3–4 cm of soil feels dry. In peak summer with terracotta pots in full sun, this may be every 2 days. Never water daily — sadabahar prefers to dry slightly between waterings.

Monsoon (July–September)

Reduce watering substantially. Let the rain handle it. Elevate pots to prevent sitting in water. The biggest risk during monsoon is root rot from waterlogged soil. Clear drainage holes regularly.

Post-Monsoon / Winter (October–February)

Resume moderate watering as rain reduces. In North India, growth slows but the plant continues flowering until temperatures drop below 12°C. In South India, it blooms year-round.

Fertilising Sadabahar

Sadabahar is not a heavy feeder. Over-fertilising (especially with nitrogen) produces lush green growth at the expense of flowers.

Recommended schedule:

PeriodFertiliserNotes
March–SeptemberBloom booster (NPK 5:15:15 or 10:26:26)Monthly; phosphorus and potassium drive flowering
July–AugustNone or minimalReduce during heavy monsoon rain
October–NovemberLight balanced feedMonthly as growth continues

Deadheading: Remove faded flowers by pinching or clipping. This signals the plant to produce more blooms. In practice, sadabahar often self-cleans (petals drop), but active deadheading improves performance.

Propagation from Cuttings

Sadabahar roots easily from stem cuttings — the fastest way to multiply plants.

Step 1: Take a cutting

Cut a 10–15 cm stem just below a node. Use a sharp, clean blade. Early morning is ideal. Choose non-flowering stems (or remove flowers from a flowering stem).

Step 2: Prepare the cutting

Remove leaves from the lower 5 cm. Leave 2–3 leaf pairs at the top.

Step 3: Root in water or moist cocopeat

Place the lower 3–5 cm in water or insert into moist cocopeat. Keep in bright indirect light (not direct sun). Roots appear in 2–3 weeks.

Step 4: Transplant

Once roots are 2–3 cm long, pot up into your prepared soil mix. Keep in filtered light for 1 week, then gradually move to full sun.

Best time to take cuttings: February–April, before peak heat. Cuttings taken in May–June may struggle in direct sun during rooting.

Seasonal Care Calendar (India)

MonthKey Action
JanuaryMinimal care. North India: protect from cold. South India: may still be flowering.
FebruaryPrune straggly stems by 30–40% to encourage fresh bushy growth. Resume light feeding.
MarchRepot if needed. Begin bloom booster fertilising. Good time for cuttings.
AprilFull sun. Water as needed. Flowering peaks.
MayPeak bloom season. Water every 2–3 days (check soil). Do not over-fertilise.
JuneFlowering continues. Reduce fertiliser as monsoon approaches.
JulyReduce supplemental watering. Elevate pots. Watch for root rot.
AugustMinimal watering. Remove any damaged or yellowing stems.
SeptemberResume feeding as rain reduces. New growth flush begins.
OctoberExcellent flowering month. Monthly potassium feed supports blooms.
NovemberReduce watering as temperatures fall. North India: plants begin to slow.
DecemberNear-dormant in North India. Reduce water. Plan division or replanting for February.

Why Sadabahar Stops Flowering: 4 Causes and Fixes

CauseSignsFix
Insufficient sunlightLeggy stems, sparse leaves, no budsMove to full sun (6+ hours). No partial fixes.
Overwatering / root rotYellowing leaves, soft stems, wet soilReduce watering, improve drainage. Check for root rot.
Nitrogen overloadDense green growth, zero flowersStop nitrogen-heavy fertiliser. Switch to phosphorus-potassium fertiliser.
Age + woody stemsOld plant, stems are woody and brownHard prune to 15–20 cm above soil level in February. Fresh growth will flower prolifically.

Most cases: it is either too little sun or too much water. Fix these first before assuming other causes.

Sadabahar and Ayurveda

Sadabahar has significant medicinal importance in Indian traditional medicine. The plant contains alkaloids (vincristine, vinblastine) that are the basis of chemotherapy drugs for certain cancers. Traditionally in India, leaf decoctions have been used in Ayurvedic and folk medicine for diabetes management, and the plant is sometimes referred to in diabetes management literature.

Important: The plant is toxic if consumed incorrectly. Do not use home remedies based on sadabahar without medical guidance. Grow it for its ornamental value and appreciate its history — leave medical use to trained practitioners.

FAQ

How do I make sadabahar flower more?

The two most effective actions: (1) Move to full sun (6+ hours daily — this is the single biggest factor). (2) Switch to a phosphorus and potassium-heavy fertiliser (like NPK 5:15:15) and stop nitrogen-heavy fertiliser. Deadhead regularly to stimulate new bud formation.

Why is my sadabahar plant wilting even when watered?

Wilting after watering is a sign of root rot. This happens when soil stays wet too long. Check that drainage holes are clear, let the soil dry completely before watering again, and if the problem persists, unpot and check roots for brown, soft, rotten sections.

Can sadabahar survive Indian monsoon?

Yes, if drainage is good. The main risk in monsoon is root rot from waterlogged soil. Elevate pots off the ground, clear drainage holes, and stop supplemental watering when it rains regularly. Sadabahar that is growing in the ground in well-draining soil handles monsoon without problems.

How do I propagate sadabahar from cuttings?

Take 10–15 cm stem cuttings from healthy non-flowering stems in February–April. Remove lower leaves, leave 2–3 pairs at the top, and root in water or moist cocopeat in indirect light. Roots develop in 2–3 weeks. Pot up when roots are 2–3 cm long.

Is sadabahar the same as vinca?

"Vinca" is used for two different plants. Catharanthus roseus (sadabahar) is sometimes called "annual vinca" or "Madagascar periwinkle." True vinca (Vinca minor/major, the trailing ground cover) is a different genus. In Indian nurseries, "vinca" almost always refers to Catharanthus roseus — sadabahar. Both are in the same plant family (Apocynaceae) but are distinct plants.

Is sadabahar poisonous?

Yes — all parts of the plant are toxic if ingested. Keep away from children and pets. The plant contains alkaloids that cause serious harm if eaten. The same compounds that make it toxic are also why it has medicinal properties when processed and used clinically. Handle with care when pruning; wash hands afterwards.

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