It is a
shrub which has numerous stems and grows up to 1.5 metres high, often less. The plant blooms mainly from January to March. This species is
monoecious with both sexes in each flower. The flowers are grouped together in a tight-packed
inflorescence ('flower-head'), surrounded by petal-looking bracts, which is 6–9 cm in diameter, and is coloured creamy-white, often tinged with pink at the tips of the innermost bracts and the flowers. The stems are reddish-brown to grey,
glabrous and smooth to the touch. It is extremely similar to
Protea afra subsp. gazensis in Zimbabwe, which occurs contemptuously at lower altitudes than
P. dracomontana, and
P. afra subsp. afra in South Africa, for which the same applies. It is primarily distinguished from these
taxa by having shorter inflorescences and a short, squat, bushy habitus. Rourke (1980) states possible hybrids between the two may exist. ==Ecology==