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tricolor plant indoors

tricolor plant indoors Hoya carnosa 'Tricolor'

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Description

tricolor plant indoors Hoya carnosa 'Tricolor'Hoya carnosa 'Tricolor' Hoya carnosa 'Tricolor' is a variegated wax plant with fleshy mid green leaves splashed with cream and often flushed pink while young. It grows as a stem rooting climber or trailing vine, with flexible stems that can hang, loop around a support or extend as runners before filling in with leaves. The plants colour pattern changes naturally as leaves mature. Young pink flushed growth settles into firmer cream and green

Hoya carnosa 'Tricolor'

Hoya carnosa 'Tricolor' is a variegated wax plant with fleshy mid-green leaves splashed with cream and often flushed pink while young. It grows as a stem-rooting climber or trailing vine, with flexible stems that can hang, loop around a support or extend as runners before filling in with leaves.

The plant’s colour pattern changes naturally as leaves mature. Young pink-flushed growth settles into firmer cream and green variegation, while older stems can carry short peduncles that produce fragrant waxy flower clusters once the plant is mature and settled.

Cream-splashed Hoya carnosa traits

  • Growth habit: Stem-rooting Hoya vine that can trail or climb with light support.
  • Leaf colour: Mid-green fleshy leaves splashed with cream and pink tones on young growth.
  • Flowering: Mature plants can form tight, domed clusters of night-scented pale pink waxy flowers.
  • Long-term growth: Can become a long indoor vine over several years when light is bright and roots are healthy.
  • Container behaviour: Best grown in a breathable substrate and a drainage pot that does not stay wet for too long.

Tricolour foliage and stem-rooting growth

Hoya carnosa is a climbing epiphyte or lithophyte from subtropical habitats. It naturally grows with roots exposed to air pockets, brief moisture and loose organic material, so a chunky mix and careful watering are more important than a large pot or rich, heavy soil.

'Tricolor' is recognised in cultivation for cream-splashed leaves and pink-flushed young growth. The stems may grow ahead of the leaves at times, especially when the plant is searching for support. Older vines can flower from persistent spurs, and those spurs should remain on the plant after blooming.

The leaves contain both green and pale tissue. Green areas provide most of the chlorophyll, while cream and pink sections create the variegated pattern and can mark faster under heat, sun or rough handling.

Care for cream and pink variegated vines

  • Light: Keep in bright indirect light. This keeps stems firm and reduces scorch risk on pale tissue.
  • Watering: Water well, then allow roughly 60–80% of the mix to dry. The thick leaves handle a dry interval better than roots kept wet.
  • Substrate: Use bark, coarse fibre and mineral drainage. A mix with larger particles keeps oxygen around the root system.
  • Pot choice: Use a drainage pot matched to the root ball. Repot when roots and substrate condition justify it, not just because the stems are long.
  • Temperature: Keep active growth around 16–24°C. During cooler months, reduce watering and keep the pot away from cold windowsills.
  • Humidity: Moderate humidity reduces stuck or distorted new leaves. A humidifier can help if new leaves emerge distorted in very dry indoor air.
  • Feeding: Feed lightly while new growth is active. Strong feeding is unnecessary and can push soft growth.
  • Training: Attach stems loosely to a hoop or let them trail. Healthy bare runners can be left to leaf out later.
  • Pruning: Remove damaged growth or prune to shape, while keeping peduncles intact for future flowers.
  • Warm outdoor placement: Summer placement outdoors is possible in sheltered bright shade after gradual acclimation. Bring the plant indoors before nights fall below 16°C.
  • Mineral substrates: Semi-hydro or inert substrates can suit established cuttings when roots stay oxygenated and nutrients are supplied gently.

Diagnosing leaf colour, roots and flowering

  • Brown cream sections: Check for direct sun, heat through glass or cold contact. Pale areas mark faster than green tissue.
  • Yellow leaves with damp mix: Inspect root firmness and drainage. Let the mix dry further and move to a chunkier substrate if it has compacted.
  • Wrinkled leaves: Check both dryness and root function. Water uptake drops when the plant stays too dry for too long or after root damage.
  • Uneven colour between stems: Expect natural variation. Prune only if one stem begins to dominate the plant’s overall shape.
  • No blooms: Review light level, plant maturity and peduncle retention. Young plants often need more time before flowering.
  • Pests: Check nodes, undersides and new shoots for mealybugs, scale or mites. Treat early before pests spread along the vine.

How 'Tricolor' leaves change with maturity

Hoya carnosa 'Tricolor' does not produce identical leaves at every node. One vine can carry cream-heavy leaves, greener leaves and pink-flushed new growth at the same time. This variation is part of the plant’s normal development and gives mature vines a layered colour mix.

Pet safety and sticky sap

Wax plant is listed as non-toxic to cats and dogs. Keep it away from animals that chew leaves, because eating plant material can still cause stomach upset. Sticky sap can appear from cut stems, so wash hands after pruning.

Hoya carnosa and 'Tricolor' meaning

Hoya carnosa belongs to Apocynaceae. Hoya honours Thomas Hoy, gardener to the Duke of Northumberland, and carnosa means fleshy, referring to the thick leaves. 'Tricolor' refers to the green, cream and pink tones seen across the variegated foliage.

Hoya carnosa 'Tricolor' develops cream-splashed leaves and pink young growth on a long-lived wax-plant vine.

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PhiloX
Alexandria, US
★★★★★ 4
A Lost Book doesn't Make Up for Lost Time
Format: Paperback
I bought the hard back copy of this book years ago & what an interesting read with great time lines & beautiful color photos. Someone borrowed the book & I forgot who I loaned it to. After years of trying to remember where it went, I at last bought it again as a paper back through Amazon.com. It's a used book with no marks & only a slight indentation on a few pages on the side. Now that I am looking into it & remembering it once again, I am over loaded with too many historical theories. Maybe it's my fault for being a book reader rather than an Egyptologist. I am going to write down some simple time frame theories & you will see what this book is about: General View: The Hebrews came into Egypt through reuniting Joseph & his brothers. They experienced the Amarna period of primitive Monotheism. Akhenaton was over thrown & polytheism was reinstated as the Hebrews were enslaved. Moses came during Rameses II & the Exodus was during the last years of Rameses II or the Pharaoh Marneptah. Amarna period of Akhenaton 1352-1337/1334 BC Rameses II 1279-1213 BC Exodus last years of Rameses II or Marneptah. Problems: Biblical History is off by 180 years if counted back from the creation of Solomon's temple. Rameses II was a great conquer, & both he & his son Marneptah never wrote of 10 plagues or an Exodus. Both died as old men & their mummys are still with us. David Rohl's Theory: revised Egyptian history by shortening the 3rd Intermediate Period by almost 300 years. Tutimaios known as Dudimose is the Pharaoh of the Exodus Exodus 1447 BC Amarna period of Akhenaton = time of King David approx. 1000 BC. Proof: letters written between an Egyptian Pharaoh & King of Israel during that period. Rameses II = Shishak of 921 BC sack of Jerusalem. Proof: Rameses II used a monogram that comes close to Shishak. Problems: goes against establish Egyptian time frames or "If the Bible doesn't fit the Egyptian time frames then make the Egyptian time frames fit the Bible". Akhenaton is no longer the 1st political monotheist & seems out of place not influencing Moses & writing letters to King David. From Another Book I Read - "Akhenaton & Moses" by Ahmed Osman Ahmed Osman's Theory: Akhenaton is the same person as Moses Amarna period of Akhenaton 1352-1337/1334 BC Exodus after the overthrow of Akhenaton by Rameses I Problems: Moses doesn't die overlooking the Promise land of Canaan as stated in Deuteronomy 34 but dies without a known grave as did Akhenaton. Moses monotheism doesn't deal with a solar disc as a symbol of the one God or a replacement of a lesser Egyptian God, but is from an inherited convent. Other Dates of the Exodus: Josephus 1552 BC Sedar Olam Rabbah 1440 BC Book of Jubilees 2410 BC Early Church Fathers 1570 to 1320 BC I need to research Immanuel Velikovsky ideas on this subject matter. I just bought the book & will review it.
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Reviewed in the United States on January 23, 2013
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Amazon Customer
Omaha, US
★★★★★ 5
Correcting the Biblical Chronology
Format: Hardcover
When I first begin my study of the Bible, I had purchased another book on archaeology and the first thing I realized is that nothing fit. The time of Solomon was impoverishment in Israel. When you read the Bible Solomon was the richest king ever. David Rohl's book Pharaohs and Kings changed all that. He persuasively shows where the chronology is wrong and when corrected things fall into place. What is commonly called the old testament comes to life. It is the greatest book on Biblical Archaeology ever written. Thank you David !!!
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Reviewed in the United States on March 10, 2019
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The Weez
San Leandro, US
★★★★★ 5
High quality for a slightly used book!!!!!
Format: Hardcover
Lots of pics and charts ... Egyptologists will love it
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Reviewed in the United States on March 12, 2024
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Meow Meema
Los Angeles, US
★★★★★ 5
Long expected and now explained mystery of Israels sojourne in Egypt
Format: Hardcover
Beautiful, detailed and well explained text book. Very hard for the history of the Bible to be accepted by so many scholars. However, archeology and history just keeps proving it totally reliable over and over again. If you want to see the pieces of the puzzle of ancient mid-east and Bible history fall in place - get this incredible book. The highly credentialed and acclaimed archeologist, David Rohl has really done an outstanding job in this presentation. Read and learn!
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Reviewed in the United States on November 5, 2013
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Eman
Waukegan, US
★★★★★ 5
An addictive read
Format: Paperback
A friend loaned me his copy and I couldn't put it down. Very well written and extremely informative. Why conventional Egyptology doesen't attempt to adhere to the obvious evidences I will never understand. After returning my friends copy to him I not only bought one for myself but have purchased others for friends and family. This book is especially helpful for one who is interested in understanding which Old Testament persons are being referenced in various accounts.Moses did not deal with Raamses the Great
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Reviewed in the United States on February 7, 2014

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