Crassula dejecta, also known as Crassula undulata, is a densely branched succulent shrublet that grows up to 16 inches (40 cm) tall. Leaves are slightly fleshy, green, often tinged red, with a row of rounded, bead-like hairs on the margins that give the leaves a silvery edge. They are opposite, more or less the same length on the whole plant, and arranged densely in neat rows up the erect stems, giving a tidy, geometric effect. There are also small, downward-pointing hairs on the young branches that give the stems a silvery dusting. Flowers are white, sometimes tinged pink, with red sepals, red ovaries that color the center of the open flowers red, and red anthers that age to brown. They are carried in tight, flat to round-topped clusters at the ends of the branches during midsummer. The flowers develop into small capsules, each holding many tiny seeds.
Source: World of Succulents
Source: World of Succulents