for the ficus: my new ruby leaves are ruby colored. had it for 1.5year. been a pain, because it lost most of its leaves in the first 2 months, but now its doing good
Epipremnum marble queen will lose most of the white in low light conditions. Most of the variegations on the new leaves is almost only determined by light level, to such an extent that the marble queen and snow queen pothos are exactly the same plant subjected to different levels of light for long periods of time.
I have a question about the Marble Queen. I got a small vine cutting a while back, and decided to chop it into one node one leaf bits, they've all rooted and were potted, and now each one has developed one new leaf. Three of the original leaves were the fully marbled/snowy type, and I got three leaves with the same variegation from those nodes. Two of the leaves were mostly green, with a small marbled section on the side. One of those gave me a mostly green with a larger marble section, and one gave me pure green. The last one was split 50-50 down the middle, and that cutting gave me a fully green leaf. All six cuttings have spent their shortish time with me under the same conditions, as I rooted them together and they're all in the same pot. I also doubt that the vine section for this small of a cutting got drastically different lighting (and obviously they shared watering, feeding, soil, etc.), so what can account for the differences between the leaves? Come to think of it, I got a significantly worse cutting of an N'Joy from the same person, this one with barely a leaf on it, and I ended up using bare nodes in a prop box for those, which surprisingly worked, and now most of those nodes are giving me their second leaves (small ones, but still), and every single leaf is pretty much equally variegated. You didn't mention the N'Joy, but I would've expected it to be less stable than the Marble Queen, though, to be fair, I'm basing that on nothing but instinct. Is the N'Joy actually stable? It certainly wasn't lighting that was helping its miniature wetsticks with variegation (and it certainly got less light in the improvised prop box than the MQ that was rooting in water). I'm perplexed. Any info would be greatly appreciated.
I have ruby ficus and Tineke, both are very stable. There is also a Belize, which is more red than ruby. There is also a yellow gem, that is green and yellow. All of these are stable.
The tradescantia nanouk can revert if it doesn't get enough light, and the quad color with too much light can put out white and pink striped leaves that will brown. It might be rare but it is possible. I also have a variagated purple heart that put out white leaves as well. The zebrina is stable, and the rainbow as far as I know is stable.
I’m honestly surprised to see marble queen on this list. When I got mine I didn’t know that these definitely want brighter light than golden and now I have multiple reverted vines. Only one vine has put out a variegated leaf after many all green leaves.
@@AlohaPlantLife it’s definitely not pearls and jade. Maybe it’s actually snow queen but it has too much green compared to online pictures. It has the splashy green, mint, medium green leaves with the occasional green sector variegation along side the splashy/strippy variegation.
Why you make this video? Now I'm looking at super expensive Thai constellations 😭 300 for a 4 inch pot... (Canadian). Have you seen the variegated fiddle leaf fig? I've seen it a few times being mentioned but not for sale, I can't imagine how finicky that plant is given its lineage but I find it interesting in a chin scratching way that one of the most popular plants has a variegated version that is seldom talked about.
😂 Sorry I’m driving up the price tag of your wishlist but hopefully the Thai Constellations will be coming down in price soon. They’re only available online or in Walmart here and they’re $300 something even at Walmart.
idk why you dont have way more views omg i love how you break everything down 😮
💚💚💚💚
for the ficus: my new ruby leaves are ruby colored.
had it for 1.5year.
been a pain, because it lost most of its leaves in the first 2 months, but now its doing good
Epipremnum marble queen will lose most of the white in low light conditions. Most of the variegations on the new leaves is almost only determined by light level, to such an extent that the marble queen and snow queen pothos are exactly the same plant subjected to different levels of light for long periods of time.
I appreciate your videos so much
Thank you!💚
I have a question about the Marble Queen. I got a small vine cutting a while back, and decided to chop it into one node one leaf bits, they've all rooted and were potted, and now each one has developed one new leaf.
Three of the original leaves were the fully marbled/snowy type, and I got three leaves with the same variegation from those nodes. Two of the leaves were mostly green, with a small marbled section on the side. One of those gave me a mostly green with a larger marble section, and one gave me pure green. The last one was split 50-50 down the middle, and that cutting gave me a fully green leaf.
All six cuttings have spent their shortish time with me under the same conditions, as I rooted them together and they're all in the same pot. I also doubt that the vine section for this small of a cutting got drastically different lighting (and obviously they shared watering, feeding, soil, etc.), so what can account for the differences between the leaves?
Come to think of it, I got a significantly worse cutting of an N'Joy from the same person, this one with barely a leaf on it, and I ended up using bare nodes in a prop box for those, which surprisingly worked, and now most of those nodes are giving me their second leaves (small ones, but still), and every single leaf is pretty much equally variegated. You didn't mention the N'Joy, but I would've expected it to be less stable than the Marble Queen, though, to be fair, I'm basing that on nothing but instinct. Is the N'Joy actually stable? It certainly wasn't lighting that was helping its miniature wetsticks with variegation (and it certainly got less light in the improvised prop box than the MQ that was rooting in water). I'm perplexed. Any info would be greatly appreciated.
I have ruby ficus and Tineke, both are very stable. There is also a Belize, which is more red than ruby. There is also a yellow gem, that is green and yellow. All of these are stable.
The tradescantia nanouk can revert if it doesn't get enough light, and the quad color with too much light can put out white and pink striped leaves that will brown. It might be rare but it is possible. I also have a variagated purple heart that put out white leaves as well. The zebrina is stable, and the rainbow as far as I know is stable.
Good
How about Spider plants?
Variegated African Violet is light responsive to gaining and loosing the variegation
I’m honestly surprised to see marble queen on this list. When I got mine I didn’t know that these definitely want brighter light than golden and now I have multiple reverted vines. Only one vine has put out a variegated leaf after many all green leaves.
Mine has been living in a north facing window its whole life with no reversion issues. Are you sure it’s a marble queen, and not a pearls and Jade?
@@AlohaPlantLife it’s definitely not pearls and jade. Maybe it’s actually snow queen but it has too much green compared to online pictures. It has the splashy green, mint, medium green leaves with the occasional green sector variegation along side the splashy/strippy variegation.
For details, mine is in a west facing window where it receives bright, indirect light for the majority of the afternoon and evening.
@@angelahegbom9053 definitely shouldn’t be reverting then….odd
Why you make this video? Now I'm looking at super expensive Thai constellations 😭 300 for a 4 inch pot... (Canadian).
Have you seen the variegated fiddle leaf fig? I've seen it a few times being mentioned but not for sale, I can't imagine how finicky that plant is given its lineage but I find it interesting in a chin scratching way that one of the most popular plants has a variegated version that is seldom talked about.
😂 Sorry I’m driving up the price tag of your wishlist but hopefully the Thai Constellations will be coming down in price soon. They’re only available online or in Walmart here and they’re $300 something even at Walmart.
@@AlohaPlantLife only seeing them from individual sellers here... Hopefully they take over ppls homes soon and get haircuts 🤣
I know it's been two years and there's no guarantee that you're still into plants, but thai constellations are super cheap now!