SKU: 17785550115
pothos n'joy

pothos n'joy Epipremnum 'N'Joy'

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Description

pothos n'joy Epipremnum 'N'Joy'Epipremnum aureum 'N'Joy' Epipremnum aureum 'N'Joy' is a compact variegated pothos with small to medium leaves edged and patched in bright white and green. The leaves are broad, crisp, and neatly patterned, with bright white patches forming clear edges against the green tissue as the vine trails or climbs. This cultivar has compact growth, bright green and white variegation, and broad leaves on a smaller vine. Short internodes keep the vine compact in

Epipremnum aureum 'N'Joy'

Epipremnum aureum 'N'Joy' is a compact variegated pothos with small to medium leaves edged and patched in bright white and green. The leaves are broad, crisp, and neatly patterned, with bright white patches forming clear edges against the green tissue as the vine trails or climbs.

This cultivar has compact growth, bright green-and-white variegation, and broad leaves on a smaller vine. Short internodes keep the vine compact in indoor pot culture.

As a selection of Epipremnum aureum, it comes from a wet-tropical climbing species native to Mo‘orea in the Society Islands, where stems use aerial roots to attach to trees and other humid forest surfaces.

Crisp white-green foliage features

  • Compact pothos growth with shorter spacing between leaves.
  • Small broad leaves with crisp white and green variegation.
  • Trailing or climbing stems with aerial roots at each node.
  • Short internodes and compact stems.
  • Bright indirect light helps reduce stretch while protecting white leaf sections from scorch.

Compact stems and crisp leaf pattern

'N'Joy' develops as a node-forming aroid vine, but its internodes and leaves tend to stay compact. The white sectors can be broad and sharply defined. Bright but soft light protects the white leaf sections from scorch while reducing stretched growth.

The compact habit makes pruning simple. Cutting just above a node can encourage branching, and healthy stem pieces root readily. For a fuller pot, rooted cuttings can be replanted around the main plant once they have formed a stable root system.

Care for a smaller variegated vine

  • Light: Place in bright indirect light. Very harsh sun can scorch white leaf sections, while very low light slows growth and stretches the stems.
  • Water: Water when the upper 25–35% of the mix has dried. Smaller pots can dry unevenly, so check moisture below the surface before watering.
  • Substrate: Use an airy mix with bark, perlite, coco chips, or pumice. Compact vines still need oxygen around the roots.
  • Temperature: Keep at 18–27 °C. Cold wet substrate can damage roots before leaves show visible stress.
  • Humidity: Moderate humidity is usually enough. A steadier humidity level helps new leaves open with fewer dry edges.
  • Feeding: Feed lightly during active growth. Use a diluted fertiliser to avoid salt build-up on a slower, variegated root system.
  • Pruning and support: Let stems trail for a tidy cascade or pin them to a small support. Prune back long sections to keep the plant dense.

Compact-growth trouble signs

  • Brown marks on white areas: Check for direct sun, dry heat, salt build-up, or long dry spells between watering.
  • Yellowing near the crown: Inspect the root zone for waterlogged mix. A compact plant in a dense pot can stay wet longer than expected.
  • Loss of leaf size: Review light, root space, and feeding frequency. Small new leaves often point to limited energy or crowded roots.
  • Long gaps between leaves: Move gradually into brighter indirect light and prune stretched stems above healthy nodes.
  • Distorted new growth: Check the youngest leaves and stem tips for thrips, mites, or mealybugs.

Safety around variegated pothos foliage

Epipremnum aureum 'N'Joy' contains insoluble calcium oxalate crystals. The foliage can irritate the mouth and throat if chewed, so keep the plant away from pets and children and handle cut stems carefully.

Name and cultivar detail

Epipremnum comes from Greek roots meaning “upon” and “trunk,” referring to a climbing habit on trees and supports. The species epithet aureum means “golden.”

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SKU: 17785550115

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4.0 ★★★★★
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Verified Purchase
Susan Hicks
Charlottesville, US
★★★★★ 5
kids love it
Format: Flexibound
wonderful way to learn without knowing it.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on December 16, 2017
A
audrey frances
Whiting, US
★★★★★ 5
a great guide to DC treasures
Format: Flexibound
This is not a guide book in terms of giving you directions and hours of operation, but it would be a wonderful first step in planning a memorable trip to the nation's capitol. Nineteen themed trails are given, seven in and around the Mall, six nearby, two across the Potomac and two farther afield. Themes include animals (Rock Creek Park, National Zoo, the George Washington University hippo (statue), the National Museum of Natural History, Owney the stuffed dog at the National Postal Museum, Oxon Hill Farm, Kingman Island and the Franciscan Monastery and National Cathedral -- and a blurb about presidential pets), statuary, music, food, horticulture, power, sports, ghosts, architecture, literature, transportation etc. As you can tell these aren't walking tours. Instead each theme gets four pages filled with photos, drawings, fun facts and information about festivals, artifacts, history and spectacle. I try to get to WDC once or twice a year, yet I still found plenty of interesting ideas for further exploration. If you are planning a visit (with or without kids),this would be agreat way to help them choose a few things they'd like to see. Information is presented in a friendly way but is not dumbed down. There is an adequate, if incomplete, index. It would be useful to have a calendar of all the events listed too.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on May 31, 2018
P
Parents of 3 young boys
Battle Creek, US
★★★★★ 5
Great book of fun facts about nation’s capital!
Format: Flexibound
I take my 3 boys (3, 5, 7) to Washington DC each year. This is a wonderful book full of fun facts for our nation’s capital. If you are looking for a kid version of a travel book that maps you through neighborhoods, etc., this is not it, but what kid would like that kind of book? That’s what grown-ups are for - mapping out the trip. Rather, this is a great supplement to read at bedtime to learn all sorts of facts about the city - from the historical pets of the White House to the error in the inscription on the Abraham Lincoln memorial. Really - these are great facts for adults also! Each page is a separate set of topics on its own, so it’s easy to read just a few pages at a time. Also there are great illustrations to hold the younger audience’s interest as well. This is a great buy and a must-have to get kids ready for their trip, or to read during it, or after (or all three!).
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Reviewed in the United States on May 28, 2018
M
Melanie "Vaxxed & Masked" Gilbert
Boise, US
★★★★★ 4
Happy Wanderer
Format: Flexibound
City Trails is not a guided walking tour (like the Freedom Trail here in Boston) of the Metro DC area. No addresses or street names are noted in the blurbs. To actually visit any of these places, you’ll have to consult a real map. For instance, the chapter “Statue City” highlights notable statuary around town. But the Capitol Building statues (in SE DC) are far from the Cathedral ones (in NW DC.) The themed groupings (G-G-G-Ghosts, Animals Around Town, Water World and more) are less maps to any place and more of an interesting overview of our Nation’s amazingly diverse and action-packed city. It’s best read as a primer on experiencing the flavor of the city (I lived and worked there.) It reads more along the lines of the “Weird But True” series made famous by National Geographic for Kids. I don’t see this being of value to tourists in town for a limited time whose sightseeing is going to include major attractions like government buildings (White House, Capitol), museums (Smithsonian), some monuments (Jefferson, Lincoln, Washington) and other popular sites (Ford’s Theater.) This guide is actually best suited for the Metro-area (WDC, MD and VA) resident – child or adult - who wants a deeper dive into their hometown’s off-the-beaten-path sights and stories. A well designed and written book of historical trivia.
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Reviewed in the United States on August 29, 2018
W
W. Simpsen
New York, US
★★★★★ 4
Nice way to learn about a trip to D.C.
Format: Flexibound
I got this for my kids to read before we went to Washington D.C. The pages are colorful, illustrated, and have short bursts of interesting details about the various attractions available to tourists who are visiting. My kids were eager to find the places on our itinerary and read about them ahead of time. They learned what to expect and were sure not to miss the important aspects of our tours. This book is recommended for 9 to 12 year olds and I think that is the perfect range. There is just enough information to peak their interest and not so much that they get bored by reading a bunch of text. The Table of Contents wasn't that informative in finding specific places, but the index was. My kids preferred to leaf through the whole book and find what was interesting to them.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on December 28, 2018

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