Windowsill plants and a snowy garden view.
Photo by Katia Hougaard, December 1st, 2023
12 notes
·
View notes
I feel like I never most about this trellis area because it was largely a failure lol but my Cissus adenopoda has recently decided to climb all the way to the top and into the ceiling. So that's something
27 notes
·
View notes
So beautiful // Pearls and Jade Pothos
For more planty contents
144 notes
·
View notes
🌱🌱My three gorgeous pothos! Golden, marble queen, and pearls and jade respectively 🌿🌿
26 notes
·
View notes
Idk, but I'm seriously beginning to get convinced that the Glacier pothos may actually exist? And that what I've always thought to be an N'Joy may actually be a Glacier? 🤔 What mostly strikes me as different is the pattern of the variegation when I compare it to my Pearls & Jade (since it seems that this is almost identical to the N'Joy pattern-wise from what I understand, except for the speckling in the green parts).
First of all, the P&J has overall much more white, and the white does seem to have a lot more tendency to reach the edge of the leaf. Whereas the Glacier seems to have more tendency to have the white in a more narrow, stripey pattern, and most of the leaves that seem to have the white reach the edge doesn't actually reach the edge, because there's a very thin border of green there in about 95% of the leaves where the white reaches the edge (of course each plant can have each type of pattern in individual leaves, but generally speaking this seems to be true). Glacier is said to sometimes produce marbling in the white (and mine very much does in some places), but when the N'Joy originated from the Marble Queen I don't see a reason why the N'Joy couldn't have marbling too tbh.
Edit: swapped the picture below for a better example. Also apparently the variegation in the Glacier has more differently spread layers, which creates many areas of several different shades between the white and darkest green, whereas the variegation of the N'Joy has less of that and more evenly spread layers, so that it's more of just white and green with less of the many different shades.
I can't really talk about the other features that are supposed to distinguish both versions like leaf size, texture, speed of growth and growth pattern, but just from the variegation pattern alone I'm beginning to think the Glacier actually is distinct from the N'Joy. I always kind of thought it was just a naming thing, but idk 🤔 It's interesting either way!
Of course, this could potentially be a lighting thing, too, so maybe I'll to do an experiment...
3 notes
·
View notes