SKU: 23855553202
chlorophytum ocean zebra plant

chlorophytum ocean zebra plant Chlorophytum comosum 'Ocean' – Foliage Factory

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Description

chlorophytum ocean zebra plant Chlorophytum comosum 'Ocean' – Foliage FactoryChlorophytum comosum 'Ocean' Chlorophytum comosum 'Ocean' is a compact spider plant cultivar with short, broad green leaves edged in cream. The cultivar forms a dense rosette with a tidy rounded shape, then matures into the familiar spider plant habit with arching flower stems and small plantlets. The foliage has a clean green centre, pale margins, and a slightly sturdy texture that keeps the plant looking full even while young. Mature plants can send

Chlorophytum comosum 'Ocean'

Chlorophytum comosum 'Ocean' is a compact spider plant cultivar with short, broad green leaves edged in cream. The cultivar forms a dense rosette with a tidy rounded shape, then matures into the familiar spider plant habit with arching flower stems and small plantlets.

The foliage has a clean green centre, pale margins, and a slightly sturdy texture that keeps the plant looking full even while young. Mature plants can send out slender stems carrying tiny white flowers followed by young plantlets. The rosette stays compact, and older stems can hang beyond the pot as the plant matures.

Compact Ocean spider plant traits

  • Compact spider plant cultivar with shorter, broader leaves
  • Green leaf centres with cream margins
  • Dense rosette habit with a neat container shape
  • Can produce white flowers and plantlets on arching stems
  • ASPCA-listed non-toxic species for cats and dogs

Species background and cultivar growth

Chlorophytum comosum belongs to the Asparagaceae family and is native across parts of tropical Africa into southern Africa. In habitat, the species grows as a perennial with rosettes of strap-shaped leaves and fleshy roots that store water through changing moisture conditions.

'Ocean' is a cultivated variegated selection of Chlorophytum comosum. 'Ocean' has a compact rosette, broader leaves and a cream-edged pattern. The plantlets form from flowering stems, so a mature specimen can shift from a tight leafy centre into a softer cascading display over time.

Keeping 'Ocean' compact and leafy

  • Light: Keep in bright filtered light or a bright room position away from harsh midday sun. Strong direct sun can mark the pale margins.
  • Watering: Let the upper part of the substrate dry before watering again. The fleshy roots hold moisture, so the pot should drain freely after each soak.
  • Substrate: Choose a loose mix that holds some moisture while staying airy. Perlite, fine bark, coco fibre, or mineral particles give the thick roots airflow and drainage.
  • Temperature: Keep conditions stable and above 15 °C. Cool wet substrate slows growth and increases root problems.
  • Humidity: Typical indoor humidity is fine. A humidifier can reduce dry-tip stress during heated indoor months.
  • Feeding: Use a light fertiliser dose during active growth. Heavy feeding can increase salt build-up and may reduce plantlet formation.
  • Repotting: Repot when fleshy roots crowd the pot. Move up one size and keep the rosette base level with the substrate surface.
  • Pruning: Remove old flower stems after plantlets are taken or once the stems dry. Trim brown tips cleanly if needed.
  • Propagation: Root plantlets once they have visible root initials, or divide a mature clump during repotting.
  • Outdoor summer placement: Warm sheltered outdoor shade can suit it during summer. Acclimate first and bring indoors before nights cool below 15°C.

Brown tips, soft centres and plantlet issues

  • Brown leaf tips: Often linked to irregular watering, dry air, salt build-up, or minerals in tap water. Flush the substrate and use rainwater, filtered water, or low-mineral water where needed.
  • Soft, collapsing centre: Check for water sitting in the rosette or a cold wet root ball. Improve airflow and let the substrate dry more evenly.
  • Few plantlets: Young plants may need more maturity. Overfeeding can also keep growth focused on leaves.
  • Scorched pale patches: Usually caused by direct sun on tender leaves. Move to filtered light and remove only fully damaged foliage.

Offset and seasonal growth notes

The cream margins on 'Ocean' are part of the cultivar’s stable leaf pattern. New leaves may vary slightly in width and curve as the plant matures, especially after repotting or seasonal growth changes.

Pet-safe status and plantlets

ASPCA records Chlorophytum comosum as non-toxic to cats and dogs. Chewing may still cause mild digestive upset or damage the rosette, so place young plantlets away from pets attracted to stringy leaves.

Spider plant name background

The accepted species name is Chlorophytum comosum (Thunb.) Jacques, in the family Asparagaceae. Chlorophytum is derived from Greek roots meaning green or yellow-green plant. The species epithet comosum means furnished with a tuft, referring to the rosette-like arrangement of the leaves. 'Ocean' is a compact cream-edged spider plant selection.

Chlorophytum comosum 'Ocean' forms a compact green-and-cream rosette that can mature into an offsetting spider plant.

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SKU: 23855553202

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Brandon Nelson
Lowell, US
★★★★★ 4
So very long….
Format: Paperback
Every time Yeltsin takes a nap? Paragraph. Bush mumbles something indecisive to Scowcroft? Boom—chapter! I felt like I was experiencing the fall of the Soviet Union in real, agonizing time. Look, it’s a fine book. If you’re going for a career in the foreign service, this is a good place to start. Otherwise, you can get a fine rendering of these events in much more concise form elsewhere.
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Reviewed in the United States on April 6, 2023
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Blu
Charlottesville, US
★★★★★ 5
P O W E R F U L .
Format: Paperback
The author summarized: "The ghost of the disappeared Soviet Union ... still haunts the imagination of contemporaries .... This amazing story teaches us not to trust in the seeming certainty of continuity and should help us prepare for sudden shocks in the future" (p. 439). An engrossing in-depth eloquent analyses concerning the events and individuals affecting the 1991 demise of the Soviet Union. Moreover, the unforeseen Chernobyl nuclear disaster on April 26, 1986, crystallized the horrors of a possible nuclear war. Thus, a new orientation to end the exorbitant arms race with the United States. Further, General Secretary Gorbachev promulgated new reforms, including, relaxing travel restrictions in 1989: "... [T]he shock that thousands of Soviet people experienced when they crossed Soviet borders and visited Western countries .... For first-time Soviet travelers to the West a visit to a supermarket produced the biggest effect. The contrast between half-empty, gloomy Soviet food stores and glittering Western palaces with an abundant selection of food was mind-boggling.... This experience changed Soviet travelers forever" (p. 82). At times, repetitive and somewhat confusing. For instance, U.S. President Bush needed Gorbachev's approval for his Iraq offense, which was initially described on Page 143, then inexplicably again, on Page 172. On another occasion, the author indicated that Yeltsin was influenced by Alexander Solzhenitsyn's brochure "How To Rebuild Russia," on Page 150, which is again repeated, on Page 173. Scrupulous editing needed. Notwithstanding such glitches, nonetheless, a fascinating detailed portrayal of the unexpected implosion of a superpower. Having read other books on the subject, if I had to select only ONE about the USSR collapse, I would choose this as the best.
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Reviewed in the United States on July 8, 2025
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Andrew Platek
Massapequa, US
★★★★★ 5
Thought Provoking
Format: Kindle
I bought this book after I heard the author on a podcast. Growing up in the US we have been inundated with the story that the collapse of the Soviet Union was an inevitable triumph of liberal, Western values. I had my doubts. Even poorly run dictatorships can muddle along for years. What the author did was center Gorbachev in the story. He was the eye of the storm. It was the terrible combination of Gorbachev’s ambitious idealism and gross ineptitude that led to the dismantling of the Soviet Union. Unlike much of Marxist historical narratives which emphasize the forces of history; the author shows that it’s individuals who shape events and are shaped by them. A different person than Gorbachev could have turned the tide in a different direction and left us a different world than we have today. This is a history book that teaches lessons not just about the Soviet Union but about human history in general.
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Reviewed in the United States on August 1, 2025
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Luca turin
Draper, US
★★★★★ 5
A compelling account of the fall of the USSR
Format: Kindle
Zubok describes blow by blow the series of decisions that sent the USSR towards disaster. Gorbachev, widely hated in Russia, comes across as principled but indecisive, ignorant of economics, and incapable of translating his worship of Lenin into coherent action. The book reads like a thriller despite the density of facts. Zubok is a pessimist, but his thesis is convincing.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 21, 2024
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Miguel
New York, US
★★★★★ 5
Fascinating, an against the grain account of the perestroika era
Format: Kindle
Gorbachev is hailed as a hero in the West but the book tells the story of a meek, naive individual that precipitated the fall of the Soviet Union creating suffering and an a!most unprecedented calamity.
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Reviewed in the United States on December 19, 2025

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