copy and paste this google map to your website or blog!
Press copy button and paste into your blog or website.
(Please switch to 'HTML' mode when posting into your blog. Examples: WordPress Example, Blogger Example)
Beginners Guide to Caring For Alocasia Polly (Alocasia Amazonica or . . . Alocasia amazonica ‘Polly’ is a compact houseplant from the elephant ear family, known for its distinctive glossy leaves that conjure up images of an Amazonian jungle—despite not being from the Amazon (or any jungle, for that matter)
How to Grow Care for Alocasia Polly - The Spruce Trendy alocasia Polly houseplants are attractive and easy to care for Here's everything you need to know to grow, including light and soil needs, watering, and propagation
Alocasia × amazonica Polly - Plant Finder - Missouri Botanical Garden Alocasia × amazonica is a hybrid whose parents are unknown It features leathery, wavy-edged, arrowhead-shaped, dark bronze-green leaves (to 16” long) with conspicuous, contrasting, thick white to silvery-green main veins In terms of nursery sales, this hybrid is commonly available as a houseplant
Alocasia Amazonica Alocasia Polly Care (Success Secrets!) Alocasia amazonica and Alocasia Polly are different varieties, but Polly is a bit smaller You can treat the care as identical Even the name of this plant is misleading! When you see Alocasia amazonica, you might think that it is a a species that comes from the Amazon rainforest
Alocasia Polly vs Amazonica: Are They the Same? Is Alocasia Polly the same as Alocasia amazonica? Get the definitive answer We compare origins, leaf size, care needs, and how to tell them apart
Alocasia Amazonica Alocasia Polly: How to Grow and Care Alocasia amazonica is most likely a hybrid of Alocasia sanderiana and Alocasia watsoniana, although many other species are mentioned as possibly involved In turn, Alocasia ‘Polly’ is actually short for Alocasia x amazonica ‘Polly’, a specific named cultivar of this hybrid
How To Care For Alocasia Amazonica – How Does Your Garden Mow It’s actually a man-made hybrid created in Miami during the 1950s by Salvadore Mauro, who named it after his nursery: Amazon Nursery Its parent plants, however, are tropical natives of Asia So while the plant’s appearance may scream “jungle,” it’s more Florida than forest