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philodendron fat boy

philodendron fat boy Philodendron Martianum 'Fat Boy'

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Description

philodendron fat boy Philodendron Martianum 'Fat Boy'The name explains itself the moment you see it. Every petiole on the Philodendron Martianum 'Fat Boy' is dramatically swollen inflated, bulbous, and hollow, like a series of fat green sausages holding up the broad, glossy dark green leaves above. No other Philodendron looks quite like this. Named in honour of Carl Friedrich Philipp von Martius, the great German botanist who spent years cataloguing the flora of Brazil's Amazon basin, martianum is a

The name explains itself the moment you see it. Every petiole on the Philodendron Martianum 'Fat Boy' is dramatically swollen — inflated, bulbous, and hollow, like a series of fat green sausages holding up the broad, glossy dark-green leaves above. No other Philodendron looks quite like this. Named in honour of Carl Friedrich Philipp von Martius, the great German botanist who spent years cataloguing the flora of Brazil's Amazon basin, martianum is a species from Brazil's Atlantic rainforest and rocky outcroppings — a plant equally at home growing on tree trunks and bare cliff faces, which explains its unusually tough, drought-tolerant character. The swollen petioles are not just a visual quirk; they are water storage organs, making this a semi-succulent Philodendron that tolerates dry spells far better than most of its genus. New leaves emerge with a warm bronze flush before deepening to the rich, glossy green of a mature plant. It grows as a self-heading, compact rosette — no climbing, no moss pole, no drama — and is one of the most genuinely low-maintenance collector aroids available.

💡 The Swollen Petioles — Water Storage, Not a Defect The dramatically inflated, hollow petioles of Philodendron martianum are its most distinctive feature and its most practical one. They function as water storage organs — the plant draws on the moisture held within them during dry periods, making it significantly more drought-tolerant than most Philodendrons. This semi-succulent adaptation is why the Fat Boy should be treated more like a succulent-philodendron hybrid than a typical aroid: allow the soil to dry much further between waterings than you would for other Philodendrons, and never keep the root zone perpetually moist. The petioles will appear visibly plumper on a well-hydrated plant and slightly softer when the plant is ready for water.
🌿 Self-Heading Rosette — No Pole, No Climbing Philodendron martianum is a non-vining, self-heading species that grows as a compact, upright clump. It does not climb, does not trail, and needs no support structure. New leaves push upward and outward from the central growing point, building a layered rosette that displays the bronze new growth at the centre against the mature dark-green outer leaves. Rotate the pot a quarter turn every 2–3 weeks for even, symmetrical growth. Its compact, structured habit makes it ideal for desks, shelves, and tabletops where a climbing vine would be impractical.
☀️

Light

Bright indirect light — an east or west-facing window is ideal. The Fat Boy tolerates lower light better than many collector aroids, but in good bright light it produces larger leaves, more vivid bronze new growth, and a more compact, robust rosette form. Avoid direct harsh afternoon sun — it scorches and bleaches the glossy leaves. Gentle morning sun is fine and beneficial. A grow light at 12–14 hours works well indoors and produces consistent new growth year-round.

💧

Watering

Allow the top 50% of the soil to dry out before watering thoroughly — much drier than most Philodendrons. The swollen petioles store water and the plant tolerates short dry spells with ease; consistent soggy soil is the primary cause of root rot in this species. Water deeply and allow to drain completely; empty the saucer after watering and never allow to stand in water. In winter reduce frequency further — the petioles provide a visible cue: slightly softened or less plump petioles indicate the plant is ready for water. Filtered water preferred; room temperature.

💦

Humidity

Average indoor humidity (40–55%) is ideal — one of the few Philodendrons that actively prefers drier air. The thick petioles store moisture internally and excessive ambient humidity can encourage fungal issues on the leaf surfaces and around the stem base. Do not mist. No humidifier needed. India's typical indoor climate is naturally well-suited. Keep away from excessively humid bathrooms or very damp corners. Good air circulation around the plant is beneficial.

🌱

Growing Media

Well-draining, airy mix — 40% orchid bark, 30% perlite, 20% quality potting soil or coco coir, 10% worm castings. pH 6.0–6.5. The mix must drain immediately and completely; any sustained moisture retention around the roots causes rot in this semi-succulent species. A terracotta pot with drainage holes is strongly recommended — the porous walls assist evaporation and prevent moisture build-up between waterings. Repot every 1–2 years in spring; slightly root-bound is preferred. Move up only one pot size at a time.

🌾

Feeding

Balanced liquid fertilizer at half strength every 3–4 weeks during the growing season (spring through early autumn). Apply to moist soil only. The Fat Boy is not a heavy feeder; consistent but light feeding during active growth produces robust new leaves. Flush soil every 3 months to prevent mineral salt build-up. Stop feeding in winter. Avoid high-nitrogen formulas — they push soft, watery growth that is particularly susceptible to rot in this semi-succulent species.

⚠️ Common Issues & Quick Fixes

Soft, Mushy, or Collapsing Petioles

The most Fat Boy-specific complaint — and the most serious. Mushy, collapsing petioles indicate root rot from overwatering. Unpot immediately, inspect the roots — trim all blackened or mushy sections with clean scissors, allow the root ball to air-dry for several hours, repot in fresh completely dry well-draining mix, and do not water for at least 2 weeks. Going forward: allow top 50% of soil to dry before watering; terracotta pot; no saucer standing water.

Yellow Leaves

Overwatering — the primary cause in this species. Allow the soil to dry much further between waterings and check that drainage is excellent. One older leaf yellowing as a new one unfurls is normal cycling. Widespread yellowing with soggy soil: unpot, trim rotted roots, repot in fresh mix, water less going forward.

Leaves Staying Small or Growth Stalling

Insufficient light or the plant being too root-bound. Move to a brighter indirect position. Check whether roots are circling the pot base — if so, repot one size up in spring. Begin consistent feeding every 3–4 weeks. In good conditions the Fat Boy produces large, substantial leaves; small leaves are a reliable indicator that one of these three conditions needs attention.

Brown Leaf Tips or Edges

Mineral build-up from tap water or over-fertilizing. Switch to filtered water, flush the soil thoroughly every 3 months, and reduce fertilizer concentration. Existing brown tips are permanent — trim neatly at a slight angle; new growth in improved conditions will be clean.

Fungal Spots on Leaves or Stem Base

Excessive humidity or water splashing on the leaf surfaces or stem base — this species prefers drier air than most aroids. Improve air circulation, stop any misting, and reduce ambient humidity. Remove badly affected leaves. Apply a diluted neem oil solution to the stem base and leaf surfaces as a preventive. Move to a drier, better-ventilated position.

📋

Quick Plant Profile

Botanical Name Philodendron martianum Engl. 'Fat Boy'
Named After Carl Friedrich Philipp von Martius — German botanist who catalogued Brazil's Amazon flora
Common Names Fat Boy Philodendron, Cannifolium Philodendron, Swollen Petiole Philodendron
Family Araceae
Origin Brazil; Atlantic rainforest and rocky outcroppings; epiphytic and lithophytic
Defining Feature Dramatically swollen, hollow, inflated petioles — water storage organs; unlike any other Philodendron
Petiole Function Semi-succulent water storage — plant tolerates dry spells; plump petioles = well-hydrated; soft petioles = water needed
New Leaf Colour Bronze flush on emergence; deepens to deep glossy green as leaf matures
Growth Habit Self-heading rosette; non-vining; no climbing; no moss pole needed; compact upright clump
Humidity Note Prefers drier air (40–55%) — one of the few Philodendrons that does NOT benefit from a humidifier
Light Bright indirect; tolerates medium light; no direct harsh sun
Watering Top 50% dry before watering; much drier than most Philodendrons; terracotta pot recommended
Temperature 18°C–30°C; no cold drafts; no sustained cold below 15°C
Mature Size 30–60 cm in pots; significantly larger in-ground in tropical gardens
Propagation Stem cuttings with at least one node; allow cut end to callous before placing in bark or sphagnum
Ideal For Collectors, Desks, Shelves, Low-Maintenance Setups, Aroid Enthusiasts, Gifting
Care Level Easy — bright light, let it dry well, avoid overwatering and excess humidity; the rest takes care of itself
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Verified Purchase
Harry G.
Fort Morgan, US
★★★★★ 4
Good for basic x86 64 but avx coverage is horrible.
Format: Paperback
After having read Irvine 7th I had a good knowledge of x32 but soon enough I realized it’s all obsolete so now it’s on to Hyde 64. The hello world program involves interfacing to c++ and assembly/linking with batch commands. Really? I’m using visual studio ide have you heard of build and run? Hyde doesn’t even mention the debugger and without this tool assembly language is impossible. But I was already familiar with this after reading Irvine so I was ok. The following chapters 2 to 9 about 600 pages worth are great so for what I paid the book is 4 stars. Great explanation, lots of complete programs. Now it’s time for parallel processing via Simd and avx and this is chapter 11, over 100 pages of instructions with no examples. It could be useful for reference but actually, no. Amidst all the formats, memory operand and register sizes the actual explanations of the instructions are vague. Well that defeats the purpose of thumbing this chapter as a reference doesn’t it? But where Hyde fails Kusswurm modern x86 begins. If you’ve made it this far sell Hyde, Irvine, and buy Kusswurm. Then you’ll have Jedi powers like me.
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Reviewed in the United States on December 5, 2023
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Verified Purchase
Steve stevonie
Fort Morgan, US
★★★★★ 5
Not for the faint of heart
Format: Paperback
This is the book
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Reviewed in the United States on August 5, 2022
A
Amazon Customer
Bozeman, US
★★★★★ 5
It benefits the high-level language programmers - Listing formatting good now
Format: Paperback, Format: Paperback
Even if not writing assembly code directly, it benefits the high-level language programmer to understand the CPU architecture and instruction set. You can help the compiler do a better job by writing your code with the hardware in mind. When it comes to debugging, it can be helpful to look at things at the assembly level. And if you are programming with SIMD intrinsics, you are still programming in assembly language and understanding the architecture is necessary. This book gets you up to speed with all the above and more. Also, the listing formatting problem that others have mentioned seems to have been fixed. I deleted the months old download from my device, downloaded again, and the listing were now good. Tested on an iPad, a Kindle Paperwhite, and a MacBook Pro.
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Reviewed in the United States on April 25, 2025
T
TechMeister
New York, US
★★★★★ 5
Bible on x64 Assembler, but not for coding beginners.
Format: Paperback, Format: Paperback
The best way to review this book is in two parts, 1st a review of the book, 2nd to address the negative reviews about the readability of the code in the Kindle edition which is the one I have. I have several books on Assembly Language, starting with the long out of print 1986 “Peter Norton’s Assembly Language Book for the IBM PC.” Over the years I have acquired several books on Assembly Language. I find Randall Hyde’s book to be hands down the best reference and most in depth book on x86/x64 Assembly language. What I feel separates Hyde’s book from others is it goes into detail on each register and machine function. Which is then backed up with numerous illustrations to help explain the concepts, code, and quizzes to test your understanding. This is not a book for coding beginners on x86/x64 Assembly, IMO, as the author jumps right in with examples that I feel are too complex and too verbose for the novice. To help fill in the gaps alongside this book, I recommend using Mike McGrath’s, “Assembly x64 Programming in easy steps”, which guide the novice with colorful illustrations step by step, on the processor, number systems, linking, and building basic Assembly programs, in byte sized chunks, that are easy to understand for the novice. Also, a basic knowledge of C++ will be needed to use this book, as several example C++ programs make Assembly calls from within the program. Again, I recommend Mike McGrath’s “C++ Programming in easy steps.” For a basic review if you lack C++ knowledge. You’ll need the free IDE Visual Studio 2022 Community edition (not VS Code) with the C++ libraries, as that is where the MASM is located. As for the readability of the code in the Kindle version, there is a workaround which is better than reading the code from the book. A link is provided to download all the code listed in the book in a zip file. Most of the code is organized by listing number from the book. Once VS2022 is on your computer, double-click on the download file you’re interested in and the code will open properly formatted in VS2022 as shown in the attached images. You will be able to interact with the code, which is more productive than just reading from the book. This is an excellent book on x86/x64 Assembly language, looking forward to volume 2. After reading this book, the only way to get further in depth knowledge of the x86 processor IMO is from Intel's massive 4 volume reference.
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Reviewed in the United States on February 6, 2022
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Verified Purchase
Jaime Velazquez
Bozeman, US
★★★★★ 4
Good reference manual for64 Bit Assembly Programming. Not an Introductory text.
Format: Paperback
I initially bought Assembly x64 in easy steps: Modern coding for MASM, SSE & AVX which is an excellent introduction to 64 Bit Assembly. This book however IS NOT an Introductory book - it is more a Reference to X64 Assembly. If you are new to Assembly Programming I suggest buying the introductory book and if you are serious about Assembly Programming then buy this book.
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Reviewed in the United States on March 14, 2024

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