Salvia falcata is a perennial shrub that is endemic to a very small area in NW Cundinamarca in Colombia, growing in dry bushland in a steep river valley at around 1000m (3,000feet) elevation—unusually low for red-flowered salvias.
Salvia falcata grows to 2m (07feet) tall, with 4-angle stems, and with many branches. The leaves are lanceolate-elliptic to ovate-ellipitic, ranging from 6to long and 1.8to wide. The inflorescence has single racemes in the leaf axils with a 2.6to red corolla.[1]