I inherited this poor plant after a family member's house was flooded. We don't know what it is, but are aware that it propagates readily. The leaves are typically a dark green, long and grow from the middle of the plant. As the leaves get older and are pushed outward they die off. Thanks for your help! ~DW
An Amaryllid of some sort. If the leaves are rather leathery and evergreen, its probably Clivia miniata. Give it a good feeding of bulb fertilizer and see if that encourages it to bloom.
EDIT* OK, you were definitely right about it being Clivia. When I mentioned the flowering part to my family member they said, OH yeah! It flowered for the first time this spring! So, with pictures of the flowers in hand I can definitely confirm it is Clivia now. Thanks for your help, saltcedar! \ The leaf structure looks right, but in a decade of watching this plant it has never flowered. I'm not sure if that means it isn't Clivia or its just never been in the right environment to flower. Its been healthy the whole time and had produced 5 new offshoots from the original plant that was purchased. Thanks for your help! ~DW
Clivia's can bloom anywhere from Feb-July with some good bright indirect light/bright shade. I believe they have to be a certain age to bloom, or be a certain size (number of leaves) Only water when the soil is dry, then drench it really good. In the winter months, stop fertilizing from Sept-Feb. Re-potting should be done about every 3 years, or when it starts to get REALLY root bound.