philodendron vs hoya Hoya 'Flamingo Dream'
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philodendron vs hoya

philodendron vs hoya Hoya 'Flamingo Dream'

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Description

philodendron vs hoya Hoya 'Flamingo Dream'Hoya carnosa 'Flamingo Dream' Hoya carnosa 'Flamingo Dream' is a pink toned variegated wax plant with thick leaves in green, cream and soft rosy shades. It grows as a flexible Hoya vine, so young plants may first produce searching stems before the foliage fills out along the nodes. The colour can shift as leaves mature. New growth may show the warmest pink tones, while older leaves harden into firmer cream and green variegation. This Hoya carnosa

Hoya carnosa 'Flamingo Dream'

Hoya carnosa 'Flamingo Dream' is a pink-toned variegated wax plant with thick leaves in green, cream and soft rosy shades. It grows as a flexible Hoya vine, so young plants may first produce searching stems before the foliage fills out along the nodes.

The colour can shift as leaves mature. New growth may show the warmest pink tones, while older leaves harden into firmer cream and green variegation. This Hoya carnosa cultivar needs airy roots, bright filtered light, careful watering and time to settle before flowering.

Pink-variegated Hoya carnosa traits

  • Growth habit: Twining or trailing wax-plant vine with nodes that can root when propagated.
  • Leaf colour: Variegated foliage with green, cream and pink-flushed sections, especially visible on fresh leaves.
  • Leaf texture: Thick, waxy leaves that store some moisture between waterings.
  • Flowering: Older settled vines can form fragrant Hoya carnosa-style umbels from persistent spurs.
  • Display: Suitable for hanging pots, shelf edges or a small trellis where stems can extend naturally.

Variegated leaves on a stem-rooting vine

Hoya carnosa grows naturally as a climbing epiphyte or lithophyte in subtropical habitats. Its roots are adapted to air, moisture pulses and loose material rather than compact, constantly wet soil. On 'Flamingo Dream', pale variegated tissue can mark more easily when roots sit cold, dry or waterlogged.

Green sections contain most of the leaf’s chlorophyll. Pale and pink-flushed areas mark more quickly under heat, direct sun or rough handling, so place the plant in bright filtered light and keep fertiliser mild.

Hoya flowers form from short peduncles on mature vines. These spurs can flower repeatedly, so keep them when pruning unless they are dry and dead.

Care for pink-toned carnosa growth

  • Light: Keep the plant in bright indirect light. Pale sections need protection from hot midday sun, especially close to glass.
  • Watering: Soak the mix well, then let it dry most of the way through. Thick leaves can handle a dry interval better than roots kept in stale moisture.
  • Root zone: Use a chunky substrate with bark, coarse organic material and mineral drainage. The mix should hold some moisture while leaving air around the roots.
  • Pot fit: Use a drainage pot close to the root ball. A pot that is much too large keeps wet mix around roots for too long.
  • Warmth: Aim for 16–24°C during active growth. In cooler months, water less often and avoid cold wet substrate.
  • Humidity: Moderate humidity lets new leaves expand smoothly. A humidifier can reduce dry-air distortion when airflow remains gentle.
  • Nutrition: Feed lightly in active growth. Pale variegated growth benefits from consistency, not strong fertiliser doses.
  • Training: Guide flexible stems early or let them hang. Long leafless runners can produce leaves later, so cut only when shape or damage makes it necessary.
  • Flowering spurs: Leave peduncles attached after flowering. Removing them reduces future bloom sites.
  • Outdoor summer placement: Use a warm sheltered position only after gradual acclimation. Bring the plant indoors before nights drop below 16°C.
  • Mineral culture: Inert and semi-hydro substrates can suit established roots when the water level is consistent and nutrient strength stays mild.

Colour, root and pest checks

  • Brown marks on pale areas: Check for sun scorch, heat buildup or contact damage. Move the plant into softer filtered light if markings appear on the lightest tissue.
  • Yellow leaves: Inspect the substrate and roots. Yellowing with damp mix often points to low oxygen around the root system.
  • Wrinkled leaves: Compare pot weight with root condition. A plant can wrinkle from drying out or from roots that have declined after staying too wet.
  • Greener stems growing faster: Greener growth can be stronger. Trim only if it begins to dominate the overall plant and you want to keep a balanced variegated shape.
  • No flowers: Check light level, plant maturity and peduncle retention. Recently rooted or recently moved plants often need a longer settling period.
  • Mealybugs and scale: Inspect nodes, undersides and tender growth. Treat early and repeat checks until new growth remains unmarked.

Natural variation in new leaves

Individual leaves may differ in colour balance. Some will show more cream, some more green, and new leaves can carry a stronger pink flush before hardening. This variation is normal for a variegated Hoya carnosa and gives the plant a mixed, changing look as the vine grows.

Pet safety and sticky sap

Wax plant is listed as non-toxic to cats and dogs. Keep the vines away from animals that chew plants, because swallowed leaves can still cause mild digestive upset. Sticky sap may appear after pruning or accidental breaks, so wash hands after handling cut stems.

Hoya carnosa name meaning

Hoya carnosa is a member of Apocynaceae. Hoya honours Thomas Hoy, gardener to the Duke of Northumberland, and carnosa means fleshy, referring to the thick leaf texture.

Hoya carnosa 'Flamingo Dream' combines waxy carnosa vine growth with soft pink new leaves and cream-green mature variegation.

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Wildthingsloved
Belleville, US
★★★★★ 5
Five Stars
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nice
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Reviewed in the United States on December 1, 2014
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Ryan Siriwardene
Los Angeles, US
★★★★★ 5
moelicious
Format: Hardcover
i cant wait to read it!!!!! It came in great condition just like the ones I bought in australia
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Reviewed in the United States on May 10, 2009
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Drewsci27
Belleville, US
★★★★★ 3
not as funny as others
the other simpsons libary of wisdom books are better. but still a fun read and good for the price. Moe
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Reviewed in the United States on April 10, 2013
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Elvin Ortiz
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★★★★★ 5
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I enjoyed this very much. I also found it an adventure to read and view these Batman tales because they were different from what I've read so far. Mark Chairello wanted to create a Batman volume with different artists collaborating on it and he accomplished that. But what was most impressing to me and what I found so different from what I've ever read on the Batman is the impressionistic style of the artwork and perhaps, the absence of plots. The narratives that we find here are most likely to be vignettes, shorter than short stories. This narrative style accompanied by the impressionistic artwork where we see each artist's interpretation of the Batman defines the tone, mood, and characterization of this collection of stories. Although each artist showed his own version of the Batman, the artwork of each had one thing in common: it stressed the Dark Knight persona of the Batman. The stories were less controlled by a sense of plot than a sense of atmosphere and characterization. These were darker than what I'm accustomed to read. Death permeates its pages. Batman fights crime but he can't prevent the bloodbath while he's doing so. The very first story, Perpetual Mourning, shows the detective seeking a clue for a murderer on a corpse in a morgue. While doing so, an interior monologue reveals the Batman's thoughts and his feelings toward the victim. Readers see their hero internalize the loss of this victim. McKeever intensifies this feeling by presenting a couple dancing: is this the woman while alive dancing with Batman? Was this someone Batman knew as Bruce Wayne? Other stories that I immediately classified as favorite are Joe Kubert's The Hunt; Good Evening, Midnight by Klaus Janson; a psychological drama, In Dreams, by Andrew Helfer and art by Liberatore; Heist, written and illustrated by a minimalist artist, Matt Wagner; Brian Bolland's An Innocent Guy is quite interesting because it summarizes Batman's life from the point of view of a person who plans on killing him; and Archie Goodwin's Heroes illustrated by Gary Gianni. This latter story is a WWII story where Batman deals with Nazis. Bruce Timm's Two of a Kind, is really a Two-Face story more than a Batman story. It has the traits of noirish films of the 40s where the attempts of criminal to reform are thwarted by fate. Two Face finally gets a human face, falls in love with the doctor who made it possible, but fate eventually gets in the way. There are some R-rated panels in this story. Walter Simonson gives us a futuristic story about the Batman, while veteran Dennis O'Neil shares a narrative that goes deep into Batman's psyche and a Christmas story that reminds us of some of his early works in the seventies. Batman pursues a strange serial killer in Howard Chaykin's Petty Crimes and Goodwin tells a haunting tale of a demonic trumpet, illustrated by Jose Munoz. Monster Maker by Jan Strnad was also quite haunting for it shoes the influence of gang violence on children. Illustrated by Richard Corbin, it is perhaps the most graphically violent of this collection. I notice that the title of this collection is accompanied by the name of Frank Miller, but he only makes one cover artwork contribution in this book. Thus, do not expect plotted narratives in this tome. Just enjoy the artwork and short vignettes about who the Batman is and the world in which he lives. I was not disappointed by this purchase and enjoyed the reading very much.
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Reviewed in the United States on July 21, 2017
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Tom Reagan
Waukegan, US
★★★★★ 5
Must-Own for True Batman Fans
Format: Paperback
I own and have read all 3 volumes of these Batman: Black and White books. They're all good, and in order of volume, so Volume #1 is the best, by far. What makes them great (and I'm mostly referring to volume one, although these can apply to all volumes): - Large collection of unique stories, and the stories are short - about 8 pages, I think. So I made a habit of reading just one or a few stories at the end of each night, for example. There's 20 different stories! So if you're a big Bat-Fan like me, you're bound to like most. - A different writer and artist for each story. So, some of the stories you'll love, and some you might hate. But for the most part, I liked a large percentage of them. And when they're good, they're REALLY GOOD! And sometimes, if the story isn't that great, the artwork might make up for it (or vice versa). - The artwork! Again, a large percentage of the stories really do have fantastic art. It's a real treat turn the page and read an entirely different story with a completely different (artistic) take on Batman. Plain and simple, every huge Batman fan should own all of these books. Start with this volume.
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