SKU: 12199441079
areca palm plant dypsis lutescens

areca palm plant dypsis lutescens Chrysalidocarpus lutescens

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Description

areca palm plant dypsis lutescens Chrysalidocarpus lutescensChrysalidocarpus lutescens Chrysalidocarpus lutescens, still widely known under the synonym Dypsis lutescens, is a clustering palm with upright cane like stems and long, arching feather leaves. Several stems rise from the base, creating a soft, fountain shaped crown with yellow green petioles and narrow leaflets arranged along each frond. Indoors, this palm develops slowly into a broad, leafy specimen with a layered vertical outline. As the stems

Chrysalidocarpus lutescens

Chrysalidocarpus lutescens, still widely known under the synonym Dypsis lutescens, is a clustering palm with upright cane-like stems and long, arching feather leaves. Several stems rise from the base, creating a soft, fountain-shaped crown with yellow-green petioles and narrow leaflets arranged along each frond.

Indoors, this palm develops slowly into a broad, leafy specimen with a layered vertical outline. As the stems mature, they become more defined, while the fronds keep the crown airy, layered, and finely textured.

Golden cane palm details

  • Golden cane palm forming grouped yellow-green stems
  • Arching pinnate fronds with many narrow green leaflets
  • Yellow-green leaf stalks and midribs give the plant its warm tone
  • Can form a sizeable indoor floor plant over time
  • Rarely flowers indoors; mature outdoor plants may produce yellow flowers and small fruits

Eastern Madagascar origin and clumping growth

Chrysalidocarpus lutescens is native to Madagascar and belongs to the palm family, Arecaceae. In habitat and tropical cultivation it can grow as a shrub-like or tree-like palm, with multiple stems forming a broad clump. Indoors, its final shape depends on light, root space, and steady watering.

Each stem grows from a central crown. Fully brown fronds can be removed at the base, while green fronds should stay in place so the palm retains enough leaf area for new fronds. New fronds emerge from the growing points and gradually open into the palm’s feathered canopy.

Because this palm forms a clump, uneven growth is normal: some canes may sit lower while newer stems fill the centre. Turn the pot occasionally so the crown develops evenly, and keep the leaf bases open enough for inspection because pests often settle where the fronds meet the stems.

Keeping Chrysalidocarpus lutescens evenly leafy

  • Light: Use a bright, indirect position. Gentle morning or late afternoon sun suits acclimated plants, while strong midday sun behind glass can scorch fronds.
  • Watering: Keep the substrate evenly lightly moist during active growth, then let the upper layer dry before watering again. Avoid cold, saturated soil.
  • Substrate: Use an airy, well-drained palm or houseplant mix with mineral drainage material to keep the root zone open.
  • Temperature: Keep the palm warm, ideally above 18 °C, and avoid cold draughts or temperatures below about 15 °C.
  • Humidity: Average to moderate indoor humidity is workable, although very dry heated air can crisp leaflet tips. Use a humidifier where winter air becomes persistently dry.
  • Feeding: Use a low-strength fertiliser in spring and summer. Too much feed can show as yellowing or salt stress on leaflet tips.
  • Repotting: Move up one pot size when roots have filled the container, often after 2–3 years. Avoid oversized pots that keep the mix wet for too long.
  • Pruning: Remove only fully spent fronds. Cutting green fronds reduces the palm’s active leaf area.
  • Leaf cleaning: Wipe dusty leaflets gently or rinse the fronds with lukewarm water so the narrow leaflets can receive light evenly.

Frond, cane and pest checks

  • Brown tips: Often linked to dry air, irregular watering, salt build-up, or old leaf age. Check moisture pattern and flush the substrate if fertiliser salts have built up.
  • Yellowing fronds: Can follow overwatering, poor drainage, low light, nutrient imbalance, or natural ageing of older leaves. Check the root zone before feeding.
  • Mites or scale insects: Fine stippling, webbing, sticky residue, or bumps on stems and leaf bases need early inspection and treatment.
  • Collapsed stems: Soft bases usually point to root or crown stress from persistently wet, cool conditions.

Pet-safe palm status

ASPCA treats the areca palm, Chrysalidocarpus lutescens, as non-toxic to cats and dogs. Sensitive pets may still get mild stomach upset from chewing the fronds.

Accepted name and synonym note

Chrysalidocarpus lutescens H.Wendl. is the accepted botanical name for this Arecaceae species. Dypsis lutescens remains a common synonym in horticulture. The genus name refers to chrysalis-like fruits, while lutescens means turning yellow, matching the yellow tones in the flowers, stems, and leaflet midribs.

Chrysalidocarpus lutescens grows into golden cane clusters with airy fronds and a full upright palm outline.

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Tom Wayne
Boise, US
★★★★★ 4
I thought they did a very good job. Being a very open minded person
Format: Kindle
Written by two Authors, each telling their story, I thought they did a very good job. Being a very open minded person, I found myself relating to a few of the many things they wrote about because I once experienced the exact same thing myself. Whether you believe what they tell you or not, they still did a great job! Fascinating and easy to read, I found myself wondering about this very large universe and all of the strange goings-on that people have been reporting for thousands of years. Are they right? Who can say? Life is a strange tapestry of events, and the authors(s) views and beliefs are as good, or better, than many other that I have read.
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Reviewed in the United States on August 9, 2015
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KClagg09
Lexington, US
★★★★★ 5
I'm totally invested in this book!
Format: Paperback, Format: Paperback
I'm new to this side of the world, ya know, the paranormal and such, but I'm here anyhow. Bradshaw Ranch and Skinwalker Ranch have most of my time these days. I'm so invested in the goings-on It's crazy. This book is really well written, easy to follow and very interesting. I hate reading, always have, I just don't do books other than school books. This book however, I can't stop reading it, I just have to know what happens next! This is just an overall good read about Bradshaw Ranch, and the similarities it has with Skinwalker Ranch, is just mind boggling. There's definitely something happening, just nobody knows yet!
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Reviewed in the United States on November 2, 2023
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Customer
Birmingham, US
★★★★★ 3
Interesting recollections but lackluster photographic evidence
Format: Paperback
The book was kind of a hodge-podge of recollections from Linda Bradshaw (the previous owner) and Tom Dongo (UFO researcher). The stories were interesting. Lots of recollections of orbs, UFO activity, strange animals including Sasquatch, general anomalous high strangeness and interdimensionality. Linda’s son had time-loss and out-of-body experience with UFO that was recounted through hypnotic regression. He relayed messages from the beings to humans, general knowledge he gained from his experiences and close interactions with entities. The main detractor from a 5 star review, in my opinion, was the lack of clear photographs as well as the organization of the experiences. It is basically like a journal of random anomalous experiences, but the video and photographic evidence that was referenced over and over throughout the written portion of book is almost meaningless in my opinion. Use an old film camera on any night and it will capture balls of light, blurry smears of light refractions, etc. There are no clear images of aliens or excellent UFO images. There are a couple bigfoot footprint and molded footprint photos that are clearly discernible and interesting. There is one color photo that looks like a mothership but it could just be a cloud formation. Overall I think it is probably a good introduction to the Sedona area, what is possible, what has happened, what one could expect if they had the time to visit and research the portals and whatnot. I think it is probably worth the read, but the images leave a lot to be desired and are over-emphasized for what they actually are. The authors referenced video they had of anomalous phenomena including aliens, and I would be interested in that if they could include links to those in future printings.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 16, 2026
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Ellzeena
West Palm Beach, US
★★★★★ 5
Fascinating
It's impossible to put this book down. I've spent dozens of hours reading about the topics of Ufology, psi, cryptozoology, etc., enough to know that these are much, much more than : imagination, hoax, alien encounter(s). I've seen three UFOs myself and I know I wasn't imagining them but I don't really understand what they 'are'. I've had psi related experiences my entire lifetime. (I've never seen a bigfoot or a mothman, but boy would I like to lol). "The Trickster and the Paranormal", George Hansen, discusses in depth what these phenomena are (and are not); "Merging Dimensions" gives the reader as close to a first-hand look as possible without actually being there. I found that I did NOT have to suspend belief one bit since I actually have educated myself regarding the nature of these phenomena. Some of the photographs are hard to decipher but WOW that "portal" is amazing. It reminded me of a screen against a wall in a dark room, the sort projectors used to view slides (back in the good old days before digital photography). That part of the book written by Tom Dongo presented his conjectures (at the time the book was written, 16 years ago) regarding the nature of these phenomena. I don't agree with some of what he says and there are explanations for other of his statements. Since we now know that consciousness can effect result in measurement on the quantum level, we can postulate that the same effect is seen on other levels. On page 104, Mr. Dongo says "However, the incredible light retreated quickly away from the group when one of the six people became hysterical with fear. Fear drives these lights, or life forms, away." Fear disengages cognition, and it's contagious: if the man next to me becomes hysterical, I will react without control (it's a fight/flight mechanism, can't be reasoned away instantly) and, when that happens (when the other people's autonomic reactions kick in as a response to the hysterical man), cognition "flies out the window" and if our consciousness is in any way related to the phenomenon, without cognition it is rendered moot. One thing I do agree with is his following statement, "Reading and listening to everything of pertinence is the only way we can build a database for the internal guidance system to decide what is relevant and what isn't. Because of ignorance or a lack of information, some of the world's most entrenched beliefs and institutions were created thousands ofyears ago by a few who had in mind only power and profit. It's been proven that many of these beliefs have no verifiable historic record outside of the original document or decree itself. many of these dictums survive basically intact, even now." Accurate analysis of so many strongly held belief systems; people seem incapable (and unwilling) to let go of them. This is pure fear, of the unknown, and of stepping away from the herd mentality. I don't fool easily and I AM no fool. This hint at REALITY (rather than what we construe as such) is fascinating and Linda Bradshaw's advice regarding spiritual authority is spot on. I'm doing more research immediately; I'm going to see what's happened in the last sixteen years. I hope I don't find myself wearing chocolate shoes but, honestly, I'm so far out on a limb already that they might just provide me a much needed snack. :o/
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Reviewed in the United States on November 22, 2010
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Filbert
Omaha, US
★★★★★ 5
accurate story about Bradshaw ranch
Format: Paperback
Having listened to online accounts of this ranch, this is an absolutely valid account. Talks about bigfoot, the greys, some angel like positive beings that come out of the portal on this property. They were forced to sell to the government which now owns the ranch. Even though there is a gate people climb it and explore the property. Abandoned ranch house, abandoned western town used in the cowboy films from the 50s-60s. Supposed to be a research project which is just a cover for what the govt is really doing there. Linda Bradshaw has amazing stories which you should read. Photos are why I bought it to see the entities and the orbs etc. Fascinating. Worth the money.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 14, 2020

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