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philodendron radiatum care

philodendron radiatum care Philodendron radiatum – Foliage Factory

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Description

philodendron radiatum care Philodendron radiatum – Foliage FactoryPhilodendron radiatum Philodendron radiatum is a climbing Araceae species from Mexico to Colombia. Young plants can carry simpler leaves, while mature climbing growth develops deeply divided blades with radiating segments. The mature leaf form appears gradually as the stem gains height on support. Bright indirect light, warmth, steady moisture and an airy root zone help the plant move from juvenile foliage into its more divided adult shape.

Philodendron radiatum

Philodendron radiatum is a climbing Araceae species from Mexico to Colombia. Young plants can carry simpler leaves, while mature climbing growth develops deeply divided blades with radiating segments.

The mature leaf form appears gradually as the stem gains height on support. Bright indirect light, warmth, steady moisture and an airy root zone help the plant move from juvenile foliage into its more divided adult shape.

Philodendron radiatum juvenile leaves and mature divided blades

  • Family: Araceae, the aroid family.
  • Leaf development: Juvenile leaves are simpler than the mature divided blades.
  • Mature foliage: Adult leaves develop deep cuts and radiating segments.
  • Growth habit: Wet-tropical climber that grows best on a stable pole or board.
  • Range: Native from Mexico to Colombia.
  • Indoor growth: Mature leaf division takes time, vertical support, bright indirect light and an airy substrate.
  • Growth rate: Usually moderate in warm, bright, humid conditions, with slower growth during cooler darker periods.

How young Philodendron radiatum leaves become divided

Philodendron radiatum shifts from simpler juvenile blades to deeply divided adult leaves. Early foliage can stay plain while the plant is still young, and stronger segmentation appears as the climbing stem matures.

In habitat, Philodendron radiatum grows in wet tropical forest, where climbing stems develop in warm, humid, filtered-light conditions. Indoors, a vertical support gives the stem a stable route upward and helps the divided leaves expand with less crowding.

Philodendron radiatum care for divided climbing growth

  • Light: Bright indirect light supports steady growth without scorching the divided blades.
  • Water: Water when the upper part of the substrate has started to dry; heavy wet soil can damage the roots.
  • Humidity: Moderate to high humidity keeps expanding divided leaves from catching or tearing during unfurling.
  • Temperature: Keep warm and stable, with protection from cold draughts.
  • Substrate: Use a chunky, airy aroid mix that drains quickly but does not dry out completely between waterings.
  • Support: A moss pole, board or similar vertical surface keeps the stem upright as it lengthens.
  • Space: Leave room around the support so mature divided blades do not rub against walls or neighbouring plants.
  • Repotting: Repot when roots fill the pot, the mix has compacted or the support no longer suits the stem height.
  • Fertilising: Feed lightly during active growth; reduce feeding when growth slows.
  • Propagation: Root stem cuttings with at least one node in warm humid conditions and an airy propagation medium.
  • Pruning: Remove damaged leaves at the petiole base or shorten an overlong stem above a healthy node.
  • Semi-hydroponics: Semi-hydro is possible with adapted roots and a clean, oxygenated mineral substrate.

Leaf damage, simple leaves and root stress in Philodendron radiatum

  • Simple leaves: Juvenile plants and unsupported stems often produce less divided foliage.
  • Mechanical damage: Deeply cut blades can tear where they rub against hard surfaces or neighbouring plants.
  • Root rot: Dense wet substrate can cause yellowing, weak growth and root loss.
  • Leaf scorch: Direct sun can mark the thin edges of divided mature leaves.
  • Pests: Inspect new leaves, petioles and leaf undersides for thrips, spider mites, mealybugs and scale.

Philodendron radiatum toxicity for pets and children

Philodendron radiatum contains irritating calcium oxalate crystals. Keep it away from pets and small children, especially where leaves or stems could be chewed.

Botanical background of Philodendron radiatum

Philodendron was published by Heinrich Wilhelm Schott in Wiener Zeitschrift für Kunst, Litteratur, Theater und Mode 3: 780 in 1829, and the genus name comes from Greek-derived roots meaning “tree-loving.” Philodendron radiatum was described by Heinrich Wilhelm Schott and published in Oesterreichisches Botanisches Wochenblatt 3:378 in 1853. The epithet radiatum means radiating or ray-like, referring to the mature leaf divisions that spread from the blade.

A climbing Philodendron with juvenile-to-adult leaf change, deeply divided mature blades and a radiating leaf outline on support.

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Southern City Reviews
San Leandro, US
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Color: Gold/G-15 Green, Lens Width: 55 Millimeters
These are what you buy when you look absolutely horrible in teardrop Aviators, which I do. I've even had commissioned salespeople tell me not to wear teardrop aviators, that's how bad they look on me. I purchased these in 2012 after owning a pair of Ray Ban New Wayfarers. I wanted something more stylish and more vintage looking. These are light, the earpieces practically disappear on your face, and the lens quality is outstanding. They've been dropped many times but so far, they're still gleaming like new. The nose pads can irritate my nose after long periods of wear, but they're still way more comfortable than my optical glasses. I wear these when I know I'm going to be in the sun for a long time because they don't give me big tan lines on the side of my face. I tried a 55mm, but ended up needing a 58mm to fit my big head. The lenses on the 58mm are a tad taller than I would like, but they provide excellent sun protection and they don't look bad on me at all. Ironically, I bought my dad a pair of 55mm American Optical sunglasses and they're almost exactly the same size and shape as the 58mm Caravans. They do provide more wrap than the American Optical. I've gotten a lot of compliments about these, maybe more than any other pair of sunglasses I've ever owned.
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Reviewed in the United States on April 24, 2016
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Jimmy McGrath
Massapequa, US
★★★★★ 4
Perfect for Pilots
Color: Gold/G-15 Green, Lens Width: 55 Millimeters
I work in aviation and got these because they have a very top gun, fresh-esque look. The glass is solid, I’ve dropped them a few times and haven’t scratched them yet (from August - March). Fits perfectly under my headset and they can slide on and off pretty easily with the headset on. I can see the G1000 perfectly, without losing any of the panel as I did with my polarized glasses. Good shades - slightly too small for my face, hence the four stars.
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Reviewed in the United States on March 20, 2020
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Manny V.
Omaha, US
★★★★★ 5
Just perfect.
Color: Gold Havana/G-15 Green, Lens Width: 55 Millimeters
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Reviewed in the United States on December 10, 2024
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JackJ
Battle Creek, US
★★★★★ 5
Almost like they used to be...
Color: Gunmetal/G-15 Green, Lens Width: 55 Millimeters
These are the 3rd pair of Caravans I've owned over the years. The 1st pair were chrome frames and got mangled one time when I had set them on the trunk of the car to fill-up and drove away without them. Went back after only 100 yards or so, but by then they had been clipped by another car and were toast. Kept the lenses, sent the frame back to B&L (when they were still in Rochester -- and when customer service really WAS important to the company) and they sent back a brand-new pair of black-framed beauties -- FOR FREE! This pair recently experienced a broken frame - right at the junction of the lower curved piece that holds the lens frames together. (How this happened, I have no idea. I was wearing them. Put them in my shirt pocket. Took them out, put them on, and the lens was still in my pocket!) Now, Bausch & Lomb is owned by Luxottica (in Atlanta, GA.) Not entirely friendly, I would say, especially in the tone of the service rep's voice and bluntness. And I was told my only hope of getting any kind of satisfaction was to ship the broken pair to them and after examination they would decide whether it was a manufacturing defect or a customer caused one. Believe me -- there are NO damage marks on these black frames. The frame just cracked due to what? Fatigue, I guess. If judged in my favor they'd give me a substantial discount (40%, I believe) off list price on another pair that they might have in stock at the time. Egads! Talk about leaving you feeling helpless. NONE of the frames and lenses shown were to my liking, so I opted out of that choice and decided to search Amazon for a pair to my liking. So, this brings me to the new ones -- the subject at hand. The lenses on these are advertised as being 55mm wide, which they are. However, the original Caravans were 58mm wide = a small but perceptable difference, especially in field-of-view coverage AND how they look on your face. The G15 lenses seem to be the same tint, and the color (gun metal grey) is very nice. They fit well, and are what one would expect given the name RayBan. Therefore, I recommend them. [Footnote: As for my broken 58mm black-framed pair -- I looked up repair shops on the I-net, found 2 that seemed to talk a good game, picked one (in Cincinnati) and shipped them off today to have the frame laser welded. I am keeping my fingers crossed that they'll come back in usable shape (as promised) and I will again have my Old Faithfull's back. $35 to save a no-longer-made classic pair of RayBans is worth it in my book.]
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Reviewed in the United States on March 8, 2013
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Daniel Tan
Lexington, US
★★★★★ 5
Classic Design!! But the 55mm frame is too small..
Color: Gunmetal/G-15 Green, Lens Width: 55 Millimeters
Really solid frame and arrived rather fast (7 days before the expected date). It included the original packaging, booklets, cloth and case (the brown one) in the original box. Was surprised that it felt quite heavy, or at least more than what Im used to, although when I wear it I can't really feel the weight. The weight also adds to the feel of it making its structure feel a little more solid that lighter sunglasses. Unfortunately, the 55mm gunmetal + green G 15 lens which I ordered, is about 6 millimetres too small at the sides for me although the lens and front frame are the right size for me and it's actually still wearable. (it's just me). I would probably get the 58mm gold + green G15 later to see if there's a big difference (shouldn't be from the measurements given). That and the fact that these are a great pair of shades with a really classic design
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