SKU: 65558368419
philodendron cebu

philodendron cebu Epipremnum 'Cebu Blue'

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Description

philodendron cebu Epipremnum 'Cebu Blue'Epipremnum pinnatum 'Cebu Blue' Epipremnum pinnatum 'Cebu Blue' has narrow blue green juvenile leaves on a climbing aroid vine. Young plants keep narrow juvenile leaves along flexible stems, while a supported vine can become stronger and produce larger foliage as the nodes attach. Epipremnum pinnatum is a wet tropical climber from tropical and subtropical Asia to the Pacific. Mature E. pinnatum can produce larger, divided leaves, while indoor 'Cebu

Epipremnum pinnatum 'Cebu Blue'

Epipremnum pinnatum 'Cebu Blue' has narrow blue-green juvenile leaves on a climbing aroid vine. Young plants keep narrow juvenile leaves along flexible stems, while a supported vine can become stronger and produce larger foliage as the nodes attach.

Epipremnum pinnatum is a wet-tropical climber from tropical and subtropical Asia to the Pacific. Mature E. pinnatum can produce larger, divided leaves, while indoor 'Cebu Blue' usually shows its familiar juvenile foliage unless it receives warmth, bright indirect light, root space and vertical growth.

What stands out in 'Cebu Blue'

  • Blue-green juvenile leaves with a soft metallic sheen.
  • Flexible climbing vine that can also trail when kept pruned and juvenile.
  • Aerial roots form at the nodes and help the plant attach to support.
  • Adult growth can produce larger, more divided leaves under strong growing conditions.

Juvenile leaves and mature foliage

'Cebu Blue' has narrow juvenile leaves, which often appear cooler in tone than green Epipremnum foliage. Each leaf emerges from a node along the vine, and new aerial roots appear close to those nodes when humidity and contact with support are steady.

When the stem climbs, the plant can shift toward a stronger adult growth pattern. Leaves may become larger and more deeply shaped as the plant matures, especially in greenhouse-like warmth. In a hanging pot, the same plant stays finer, looser and easier to trim.

Care for colour, roots and leaf size

  • Light: Give bright indirect light to maintain compact growth and clear leaf colour. Acclimate slowly to any gentle direct sun and protect the leaves from hot midday exposure.
  • Watering: Let the upper 25–35% of the substrate dry before watering again. Saturate the mix evenly, then allow the pot to drain fully.
  • Substrate: Use a chunky aroid mix with bark, perlite or pumice and coco fibre. The roots need moisture around them, with open air spaces through the pot.
  • Humidity: Moderate humidity is enough for basic growth, while 50–70% humidity helps aerial roots attach and new leaves expand with fewer dry edges.
  • Temperature: Keep it between 18–28 °C. Cool windowsills and wet substrate slow root function.
  • Support: Train the vine onto a moss pole, bark pole or plank if larger leaves are the goal. Tie stems loosely so nodes touch the surface.
  • Pruning: Cut above a node to encourage branching or to keep a fuller pot. Cuttings root readily in water, sphagnum, perlite or a light propagation mix.
  • Mineral growing: Well-rooted cuttings can adapt to semi-hydro or mineral substrate after a gradual transition. Keep the crown above the wet zone and monitor older soil roots during the change.

Signals from the vine

  • Faded or stretched growth: Check light level and the distance from the window. Longer internodes usually mean the stem is reaching for stronger light.
  • Yellow leaves: Inspect the root zone for staying wet, drying too hard between waterings or sitting cold. Adjust watering frequency before feeding more.
  • Brown tips: Look for irregular watering, salt build-up or very dry air around expanding leaves. Flush the mix and keep moisture more even.
  • Leaves staying small: Add support and guide the nodes onto it. A loose trailing stem usually keeps producing juvenile foliage.
  • Pests: Check leaf undersides and nodes for thrips, scale and mealybugs. Treat early, because the narrow leaves can hide damage along the midrib.

Safety

Epipremnum pinnatum 'Cebu Blue' contains insoluble calcium oxalate crystals and should be kept away from pets and small children. Chewed leaves or stems can irritate the mouth and digestive tract. Wash hands after taking cuttings or removing damaged growth.

Botanical name background

The genus name Epipremnum refers to a plant growing upon a trunk. Pinnatum means feathered or pinnate, referring to the divided appearance mature leaves can develop. The plant belongs to Araceae.

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SKU: 65558368419

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