SKU: 17429600656
philodendron burle marx variegated stable

philodendron burle marx variegated stable Philodendron Burle Marx Variegata – Foliage Factory

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Description

philodendron burle marx variegated stable Philodendron Burle Marx Variegata – Foliage FactoryPhilodendron 'Burle Marx' variegata Philodendron 'Burle Marx' variegata is a variegated Burle Marx Philodendron with glossy green leaves broken by cream, pale yellow, or light green sectors. The pattern can appear as marbling, streaking, or larger irregular patches, so each leaf may show a different balance of green and pale tissue. The plant develops through visible stems with nodes, so it can be kept fuller through pruning or guided upward as the

Philodendron 'Burle Marx' variegata

Philodendron 'Burle Marx' variegata is a variegated Burle Marx Philodendron with glossy green leaves broken by cream, pale yellow, or light green sectors. The pattern can appear as marbling, streaking, or larger irregular patches, so each leaf may show a different balance of green and pale tissue.

The plant develops through visible stems with nodes, so it can be kept fuller through pruning or guided upward as the stems begin to extend. Its flexible stems can spread in a pot or be secured to a stake, plank, or pole as growth lengthens.

Variegated Burle Marx traits

  • Growth habit: Stem-forming Philodendron with a spreading to climbing tendency as it matures.
  • Leaf pattern: Green leaves carry cream, yellow, or pale green variegation in irregular sections.
  • Leaf shape: Glossy leaves are held on visible petioles and can build a dense pot-grown plant.
  • Stem behaviour: Stems can be pruned for fuller growth or secured upward once they begin to extend.
  • Propagation: Requires a node-bearing stem cutting; leaf-only cuttings cannot produce a full plant.

Growth, variegation and support

Philodendron 'Burle Marx' variegata grows from a visible stem with nodes. As the plant develops, those nodes can produce aerial roots and new growth points. It can stay bushier when pruned, or develop a more vertical habit when trained upward.

The variegation is irregular by nature. Some leaves may be mostly green with small pale flashes, while others may carry broader cream or yellow sections. Stems with enough green leaf area usually root and continue growing more reliably than stems producing mostly pale leaves.

Place it in bright filtered light, with the pale cream-yellow sections shielded from direct midday sun that can scorch thin variegated tissue.

Growing Philodendron 'Burle Marx' variegata indoors

  • Light: Give bright indirect light. Avoid harsh direct sun, especially on leaves with large pale sections.
  • Watering: Water when the upper part of the substrate has dried. Rehydrate the root ball fully, then let excess water drain away.
  • Substrate: Use a chunky aroid mix with bark, coco coir or chips, perlite, pumice, and a small moisture-retentive component.
  • Drainage: Keep the potting mix airy. A dense wet mix can cause root stress, yellowing leaves, and weaker stem growth.
  • Humidity: Moderate to higher humidity helps new leaves expand with fewer dry edges on pale tissue.
  • Temperature: Keep between 18–28°C. Avoid cold windowsills and wet substrate in cooler conditions.
  • Support: Add a stake, plank, or pole when stems begin to lean. Secure stems loosely near nodes.
  • Feeding: Feed lightly during active growth. Pause fertiliser if roots are damaged, leaves are yellowing, or the substrate is staying wet for too long.
  • Repotting: Repot when roots fill the pot, growth slows despite good care, or the plant dries much faster than before. Move up gradually.
  • Pruning: Prune above a healthy node to shape the plant or encourage a fuller pot. Keep enough green foliage for recovery.
  • Semi-hydroponics: Can adapt to airy mineral substrates if roots are cleaned carefully and the stem base stays above the wet zone.
  • Propagation: Use stem cuttings with at least one healthy node and some green tissue. Leaf-only cuttings will not restart into a full plant.

Common issues with Philodendron 'Burle Marx' variegata

  • Brown pale areas: Check for sun scorch, dry air, or irregular watering. Move to bright filtered light and stabilise root moisture.
  • Yellowing leaves: Check whether the lower pot is staying too wet. Improve drainage and let the upper substrate dry further.
  • Weak, mostly pale growth: Prune back to a healthy node with enough green tissue if new growth becomes too pale to continue well.
  • Long stems: Add support or prune above a node to refresh the shape. Root healthy cuttings from sections with visible nodes.
  • Distorted new leaves: Inspect for thrips, mites, scale, or mealybugs around new growth and petiole bases.

Managing variegated growth

Philodendron 'Burle Marx' variegata can produce greener leaves, finely marbled leaves, or broader cream-yellow sections as it grows. Stems with enough green tissue are more reliable for continued leaf production and propagation.

When propagating, choose a stem section with a healthy node and enough green leaf tissue to support rooting. Very pale cuttings can struggle because they have less chlorophyll available for energy production.

Pet and child safety

Keep Philodendron 'Burle Marx' variegata away from pets and children. Its tissues contain insoluble calcium oxalate crystals that can irritate the mouth, throat, digestive tract, and sensitive skin. Wash hands after pruning or handling sap.

Philodendron genus and Burle Marx name

Philodendron belongs to the Araceae family. The genus name is commonly translated as “tree-loving”, reflecting the tree-associated growth seen in many Philodendron. Philodendron burle-marxii G.M.Barroso, 1957 was named in honour of Brazilian landscape architect Roberto Burle Marx.

With steady warmth, an airy substrate and room for its stems to extend, Philodendron 'Burle Marx' variegata can mature into a full, patterned indoor plant shaped by pruning or trained upward.

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SKU: 17429600656

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Pamela K.
Lake Worth, US
★★★★★ 5
Mr. Hancock Intrigues Once Again!
Format: Paperback
Mr. Hancock is a fabulous writer/author that I have had the pleasure of reading for many years now! Be it his non-fiction books or like this book, historical-based fiction, he always leaves you thinking and contemplating life and where we come from and how we fit in on this planet and in the this universe! This book had me right from the very first paragraph, I knew it wouldn't take me long to finish it, which it didn't...of course, leaving me hungry for the next book in this trilogy! I have always been intrigued and fascinated with the paranormal and was pleasantly surprised to find it fitting in perfectly and so naturally in this tale. What I would like to thank Mr. Hancock for is his ability to describe scenes, people, actions, interactions, rituals, etc. in such clear, concise and extreme detail using many rarely-used (anymore in this day and age) adjectives making every page come alive for me! I was so enthralled with his writing in this book that I felt like I was watching a movie...very vivid! I almost felt as if I was in that world and that time while reading this fabulous book! I was relating part of the book to my husband one day and actually started out a sentence by saying to him..."she told me", my gosh...I caught myself in mid-sentence...what was I saying?!?! That's how captivating this book and the story was to me...I WAS there! Thank you once again Mr. Hancock for all you do and all your studies...you are always thought-provoking in all you bring to us...your readers, listeners and followers! Your work and travels are much appreciated and certainly needed for the awakening of mankind...please don't quit sharing with us anytime soon!
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Reviewed in the United States on December 30, 2013
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Zen
Lake Worth, US
★★★★★ 5
Gripping & Enthralling
Format: Kindle
Get this book, and jump on the thrill ride. Savage war dogs in full plate armor, human sacrifice on an industrial scale, cannons firing grapeshot point blank into charging hordes of unsuspecting warriors, intense duels within the Spanish and Native groups... this book is graphic and hard to put down. Just be aware that as pt. 1 of a trilogy, it WILL leave you hanging, and wanting more. I suppose that is just the nature of the beast... and we must patiently await pt. 2. Far more historical than a fantasy, but more fantastic than a history... this novel falls almost perfectly into that middle ground, sweet spot. It is extremely well researched, with few liberties taken, so you really feel like you are observing things that could very well have transpired. However, it goes beyond a flat, boring recreation of the extant journals and histories of the conquest of New Spain, and introduces vivid characters, visions, dreams, and witchcraft to bring the tale to life. Historians might appreciate the graphic and accurate depictions of battles and intrigue, and fantasy buffs might dig the subplots involving mushroom visions, metaphysical "gods," and a young witch in Tenochtitlan (being stuff that couldn't be derived from source material and must come from the prolific mind of Mr. Hancock). Some might prefer these things stay separate and "never the twain shall meet," but there are books enough for purists out there. What Graham Hancock has done is present a page-turning story which fully draws the reader into a world which is a fairly good estimation of that world that existed when Cortez & his worldview met the Mexica & the Maya... and supplanted theirs. Given that most everyone on Earth already knows this story--and how it ends--it was IMHO a very wise decision for the author to add drama and tension by fleshing this out into a "fictional" novel. I would say the breakdown is 1/3rd non-fiction, 1/3rd logical extrapolations from what we know, and 1/3rd pure fantasy. I honestly can't say which part I prefer. Just do yourself a favor and read this.
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Reviewed in the United States on March 6, 2014
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Gsorme
Natrona Heights, US
★★★★★ 4
Very impressive
Format: Paperback
I approached this one with caution and came away impressed, glad to have read it, and looking forward to the sequel. It's a fascinating and occasionally breathtaking novel. Hancock has a knack for writing compelling fiction. It's funny: often when people write reviews of his non-fiction books they'll say they read like good thrillers. This one is compelling as fiction but also had enough historical detail to keep me interested beyond the plot and to make me think about the Spanish conquest of Mexico in a different light. I was very grateful for the endnote by Hancock giving an overview of the types of "fictional" elements he introduced into the book (such as combining a couple of historical events into a single event in order to keep the appropriate pace for a novel) because this clarified things and allowed me to come away from the book with a deeper overall understanding of that period in history--which Hancock really does bring alive. Granted, this is Hancock's take on it--even non-fiction historical books have an author's "take" on events--but it seems to be a very well-informed take. Mixed in are supernatural elements and hints of the non-orthodox elements of history that Hancock is known for investigating in his non-fiction. For me, the blend was good. It's not a perfect novel. For example, the style of switching perspective from character to character from short chapter to short chapter was a bit jarring at first; I found it unnecessary and it ended up taking me out of the narrative for a few short moments. (Perhaps this was done to "hit the ground running" and introduce the large cast of characters and plot threads quickly; still, for me it was too much at first.) However, this stylistic approach shifts as the book goes on; the sequences become longer and occasionally blend together. Ultimately this worked, especially given the large cast and numerous plots the book juggles. If it hadn't worked, I would've put the book down; as it was, I did end up turning pages (on my Kindle) rather quickly and not getting bored. There is an immense amount of blood and gore. Very graphic. I won't pass judgment on it. It did give a pretty visceral impression of the whole human sacrifice element of the Mexica and other peoples, and of what battle was probably like at the time. Character-wise the book is diverse and interesting. There are a few semi-saccharine moments and lightly-drawn characters, but in general all are developed to help drive the story forward and to offer possible insights into their historical counterparts. Ultimately I guess we could call this a "sprawling epic," one that wraps up the first part of its story at the end but leaves a huge section to be developed in the next installment. I hope we don't have to wait too long. As I said at the beginning of this review, I didn't really know what to expect from this book but it really was quite fluid, exciting, surprising, and enlightening. Very impressive.
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Reviewed in the United States on August 3, 2013
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Jason M.
Lowell, US
★★★★★ 5
Graham Hancock has woven a compelling tale of historical fiction that does not feel like history or fiction
Format: Kindle
This has been a relentless and compelling read from page one and comes from one of the most innovative thinkers of our time. Graham Hancock has woven a compelling tale of historical fiction that does not feel like history or fiction. Its characters are real and relatable for their humanity, their virtues, their vices, and their corruption. I especially enjoy his characterization of Montezuma and Cortes, two iconic characters from the pages of history who become living, breathing, understandable humans for the readers. The supernatural elements of the story are undeniably present, but they are handled in a way that blends into the tapestry of the story rather than as silly plot devices. Also, those same supernatural elements help throw into sharper relief the unimaginable brutality and horror of which both of these great civilizations on a collision course were capable. The violence is brutal and horrific, no doubt, but for me the gentleness and humanity of the author in describing it softens its impact. Also, even though the book ventures into some very dark, cruel times in human history, the goodness and humanity of many of the characters prevents the story from becoming a tale of despair or hopelessness. I am a fan of Graham Hancock's non-fiction work, and this book firmly cements him as a fiction author I will be revisiting. Superb!
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Reviewed in the United States on April 28, 2015
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Amazon Customer
Alexandria, US
★★★★★ 5
Cortes sails out of Cuba with a few hundred men under bad circumstances. He brings a priest along who rapes ...
Format: Paperback
Graham Hancock's War God is a novel about Cortes, the Spanish conquistador, taking over Central America in the 16th century. Although fiction, the author tells most of the story through the eyes of the Mexicas, Aztecs, Mayans, and Tlascans in the 1520s. The book begins with Montezuma tripping out on mushrooms, praying to the god Hummingbird, and sacrificing thousands of people on his pyramid. He is preparing for the return of Quetzalcoatl and wants to be ready. Two of the main characters, Malinal and Tozi, escape to influence history. Cortes sails out of Cuba with a few hundred men under bad circumstances. He brings a priest along who rapes and murders children. Other generals and captains help him first take over Ponchantan by using cannons and guns which the Mayans believe are supernatural powers. They defeat tens of thousands of people with advanced weaponry. Disappointed the city doesn't have much gold, they loot nearby towns and come up with almost nothing. They find their way to Tenochtitlan and take over instantly. Montezuma believes Cortes is Quetzalcoatl, the plumed serpent god, and doesn't even put up a fight. My Review: I bought this book because I like Graham Hancock's work on aliens and Ancient Aliens. I thought the story would have more of a supernatural twist. Tozi, one of the supporting characters, could turn invisible, but that was the extent of magic. The book fits in better with historical fiction. The story was an amazing epic. Hancock researched every angle possible, and put it into a highly entertaining story while teaching the reader about Central American history. I really loved the character of Malinal, a young woman forced into being a sex slave. Tozi the teenage witch was also interesting as she escaped from the sacrifice of Montezuma. Cortes was portrayed as a thoughtful leader who sought new lands and gold. I really enjoyed the book, but I do have one criticism. Hancock can get very wordy per my reading tastes, especially in battle scenes. Otherwise, this was a terrific read for anyone who loves history. 4.5/5 Stars http://dinaraeswritestuff.blogspot.com/
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Reviewed in the United States on October 11, 2015

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