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Evergreen plants
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This is our selection of plants that can live in your home, as "indoor plants". These hard-to-find species are all very different but they can all be grown in your home. Some can take very low light and some others might need to receive some sun from a window. Palms, bromeliads, cordylines and aspidistras should never dry out. On the other hand, Sansevierias, Hoyas and Rhipsalis need less water and can even take drought.
This philo with excitingly thin pinnate foliage is possibly a clone of the variable species Philodendron pedatum, selected for the particularly narrow lobes.
Ornamental philodendron from Venezuela and NE Brazil. It is reminiscent of P. selloum but it is more compact and tidy, with thicker, stiffer leaves and show reddish spots on the leafstalks. Just like selloum,it wants high ligth
This is a rather different-looking, frost-tolerant Philodendron with oval leaves held on tall petioles. The stem creeps on the ground and does not like to climb. Leaf stalks grow vertically to 30-60 cm, holding leathery glossy leaves. Philodendron reneauxii is uncommon in collections, but it is a winner in cool to cold conditions.
Unusual and attractive climbing philodendron. Leaves are glossy and petioles are coated by brightly-coloured bristle-like scales ("squamae" in Latin). These bristles are soft and not spiny and they turn colour as they age from red to green.
Philodendron tortum is an epiphytic climber, found in a wide part of Amazonia, always up on tree trunks. It stands out in collections because its leaf blades are deeply pinnatifid, "skeleton-like", glossy dark green above, and pale green below, with a remarkable midrib. It does not climb fast and in cultivation easily stays bushy.
This is a hybrid climbing Philodendron, with exciting leaves. BGB is a fancy name meaning Big Glorious Bastard (with a mix of references to its hybrid origin,to its P. gloriosum parent and to the movie "Inglorious bastards" It is a cross of Philodendron gloriosum and Philodendron giganteum.
Colourful variegated philo. 'Painted Lady' it is not new, while it is a "classic" successful hybrid with lots of pink-red colour on stems and glossy yellow streaked leaves.
A blue fern from America, with large wide fronds growing from a creeping stem. It becomes even showier when the spores show up with a bright orange colour.
"Elkhorn ferns" or "staghorn ferns" naturally grow on tree trunks as epiphytes. This species is native to Oceania and tolerates almost-freezing temperatures, so it can be grown outdoors in sheltered areas of the Mediterranean. We offer a large multi-headed plant grown in a hanging basket. If you divide it, you can make 2 or 3 large plants and a few more...
Very exotic small tree native to New Caledonia. Few palm-like branches hold large coppery red to dark green leaves with toothed edges. We offer sun-hardened plants, a perfect people-stopper for the coastal Mediterrean garden.
Popular feather palm native to river borders of Southern Madagascar, easily grown in the Mediterranean.
One mature rosette, 5-8 cm diameter. A miniature creeping Sansevieria, with spiky tight rosettes on stolons. This "Bally 12681" from Kenya is surely the smallest and the cutest of all the species! Easy and fast growing. Good for terrariums and for hanging baskets.
NEW ! Large head with leaves of 30-40 cm - This species has cylindrical smooth leaves with a green-gray banding.Old plants in the ground can reach 1-2 m in height.
30-40 cm wide. This is a form with green long leaves, originating from Ethiopia or Eritrea. There are some similar plants in Somalia with shorter grayer leaves. Fan-shaped succulent with distichously arrangedthick leaves, of a bright blue-green. Slow growing and still very uncommon in the trade.
Giant Plant: Perfect 60-90 cm wide fan - Form with green long leaves, probably originating from Ethiopia or Eritrea of this spectacular fan-succulent with thick blue-green leaves. Seldom offered for sale. Slow growing.,
Elegant sansevieria with large wide mottled leaves. It is native to Zaire and was described in the year 2000. Single or paired leaves rise from a thick, underground rhizome.
NEW ! - Small rooted clump - "Parva" means "small"! Tiny stoloniferous species, eventually forming a carpet or filling ahanging basket. Native to cooler mountains of Rwanda, Uganda andKenya, it is probably the hardiest of the Sansevierias.
A huge clump of Green Elephant Tusks: stiff, upright cylindrical leaves up to 2 m tall. This is an impressive species from Tropical East Africa. The largest of all sansevierias. It can grow indoors in a large pot, in bright light. We ship a 40-60 cm plant, bare-rooted.
NEW ! - Cont. 8-10 cm. The most sought after of all the “Hahnii”. Thin, small, yellow, semi translucent leaves with a wide, central green band. Its ample variegation makes this plant the most delicate of the series: better grown indoor in a warm,
At the moment there are few products in this category Indoor Plants