SKU: 22550508323
parlor palm pests

parlor palm pests Chamaedorea elegans

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Description

parlor palm pests Chamaedorea elegansChamaedorea elegans Chamaedorea elegans, widely known as the Parlour Palm, is a small understory palm with fine, feathered fronds and a naturally compact habit. Slender green stems carry narrow leaflets along arching fronds, giving the plant a soft layered outline as it matures. Several young plants are often grown together in one pot to create a fuller crown from an early stage. Growth is slow and steady: older stems gain height gradually while fresh

Chamaedorea elegans

Chamaedorea elegans, widely known as the Parlour Palm, is a small understory palm with fine, feathered fronds and a naturally compact habit. Slender green stems carry narrow leaflets along arching fronds, giving the plant a soft layered outline as it matures.

Several young plants are often grown together in one pot to create a fuller crown from an early stage. Growth is slow and steady: older stems gain height gradually while fresh fronds rise from the crown. Indoors, Chamaedorea elegans stays manageable for many years when the root zone remains lightly moist, airy, and protected from cold stress.

Fine fronds and parlour palm habit

  • Small palm with fine, pinnate green fronds and a soft upright crown
  • Slow-growing container plant, often grown as several young stems together
  • Native to Mexico and Central America, where it grows as an understory palm
  • Adapts to bright indirect light and lighter shade indoors
  • Pet-friendly according to ASPCA listings for cats and dogs

Growth habit, origin and frond detail

Chamaedorea elegans belongs to the palm family, Arecaceae. Its native range extends from Mexico into Central America, where it grows below taller vegetation. Its slim stems, shade-tolerant fronds and steady response to filtered indoor light match that understory habitat.

The fronds are pinnate, with narrow leaflets arranged along a central axis. Each new frond adds height and width gradually, so the plant develops by layering fresh leaves above older ones. Mature plants may flower under good conditions, producing small yellowish inflorescences, although indoor flowering depends on plant age, light and overall growth.

Keeping Chamaedorea elegans evenly green

  • Light: Keep in bright indirect light to light shade. Direct midday sun can scorch the thin leaflets.
  • Watering: Allow the top layer to partly dry before the next thorough watering. Keep the root ball lightly moist, then let excess water drain fully.
  • Substrate: Use a loose houseplant mix with good drainage. Fine bark, coco fibre, perlite, or mineral particles help keep oxygen around the roots.
  • Temperature: Hold temperatures above 15°C for steady indoor growth. Protect from cold draughts, cold windowsills, and sudden temperature drops.
  • Humidity: Average indoor humidity is usually tolerated, but dry air can increase brown leaf tips. A humidifier or grouped plants can help during heated months.
  • Feeding: A diluted balanced fertiliser every 4–6 weeks in spring and summer is enough for this slow palm.
  • Repotting: Move up only once the pot is well filled with roots. Move up by one pot size and keep the stem bases at the same level.
  • Pruning: Remove fully dry lower fronds at the base. Keep cuts away from the central growing point of each active stem.
  • Warm-season outdoor placement: A sheltered, shaded position can suit it during warm weather above 15°C. Acclimate gradually and bring it indoors before cool nights return.
  • Propagation: Commercial propagation is mainly by seed. Multi-planted pots can be separated when stems divide cleanly with their own roots.

Brown tips, yellow fronds and mite checks

  • Brown leaflet tips: Often linked to dry air, irregular watering, salts in the substrate, or cold draughts. Check the watering pattern and flush the pot occasionally with clean water.
  • Yellowing lower fronds: A single ageing frond is normal. Several yellow fronds at once point to waterlogged roots, cold substrate, or depleted conditions.
  • Pale, stretched growth: Very low usable light produces weaker, looser fronds. Move the plant closer to a bright window with filtered light.
  • Fine webbing or speckled leaves: Check for spider mites, especially in warm dry air. Rinse foliage and treat early before damage spreads.

Cane clump and pruning notes

Young Chamaedorea elegans plants are often planted in groups for a fuller pot. In a shared container, stronger stems may gain more light and space while smaller stems slow down. This is a normal part of how grouped palms develop over time.

Pet safety and handling

ASPCA lists Chamaedorea elegans as non-toxic to cats and dogs. Chewed fronds can still upset sensitive stomachs, so trim damaged growth and discourage pets from grazing.

Name origin and species background

The accepted botanical name is Chamaedorea elegans Mart., in the family Arecaceae. The genus name Chamaedorea is derived from Greek elements commonly interpreted as “ground” and “gift”, referring to the low stature of many species in the genus. The species epithet elegans means elegant, matching the plant’s fine fronds and restrained growth habit.

Chamaedorea elegans shows soft feathered fronds, slender green stems and a compact palm profile.

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SKU: 22550508323

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Scott Smith
San Leandro, US
★★★★★ 5
Take licking and keeps on ticking
Color: Black/Green
I think it looks great. I love Timex in the summer time when I go swimming. You don't have to worry about it. 🌞🌧🥶
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Reviewed in the United States on May 17, 2026
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Ken Jones
Bozeman, US
★★★★★ 4
Well thought-out features. Hopeful that the seals hold on this newer variant of the Classic 100.
Color: Black/Green
6 years ago, I tried my first variant of the Classic 100. The features were mostly, as expected, but the unit failed a short while into usage. This was disappointing, because the classic 50 had been a reliable goto until my last classic 50 started to fail this month. The current classic 100 variant arrived in a damaged box, but the watch appeared to have no physical damage. All functions operated as expected, save for the audible alarms, and beeps. Amazon/Timex offered to discount or replace. As I need the audibles for specific workouts, and daily meds, I opted for the replacement. I'm a day into the replacement and am very satisfied with the purchase. So far, it exceeds the classic 50 in many functions, but I am still partial to the button feel of the older unit. I've made it through a swim workout with no adverse performance. I'm hopeful that the current variant proves to have more reliable seals than the earlier model that I tried. If so, this is a worthy upgrade to the classic 50. ****************************************************************************************************************************** (Details from 2020 purchase) Over the last 15 years, I've purchased several ironman watches for a variety of workouts and incorporation into timed/scheduled home and work activities. Until this 100-lap model, all others worked great and continued to work well beyond the band failure (yeah, count on it) after 3 or 4 years. For this model, the indiglo stopped working within 3 months and now, 11 months in, the watch has fully reset 3 times unprompted during the past 2 weeks. This is fairly aggravating since it made me late for an appt on one failure and on another wiped out a number of workouts that I was tracking for an upcoming tri. Visibly, the watch looks new, no marks, no apparent moisture, but it has now proven itself to be thoroughly unreliable. This is very sad, because I found multiple uses for each of the features included in this model, and I had even adjusted to operating the very stiff split and stop buttons during swim/bike/run sessions. I gave this model 3 stars on water resistance, because I have no evidence either way as to whether this or the stiff buttons had anything to do with its failure. I'm going back to the 50-lap version. If I see a hint of non-band related problems with that, I'll have to assume that Timex is no longer in the business of making ironman watches for athletes.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 28, 2019
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Amazon Customer
Grantham, US
★★★★★ 5
Ironman 100
Color: Black/Green
Great watch, as a trainer it has everything you need if you don’t want to be distracted with notifications. Best part is the interval timers & stop watch. It did come with the indiglo button rolling around in the box… I popped it back on and it seems secure now… we’ll see. I have 2 Ironman 30’s and they are awesome as well… just doesn’t have the interval timer like the 100 series.
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Reviewed in the United States on February 21, 2026
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brobeta
Natrona Heights, US
★★★★★ 5
great watch for distance running, or any time you need a timer, alarm, or just the time of day
Color: Black/Yellow
I bought my first one of these shortly before running my first marathon, so that I could keep good track of my pace. Now in addition to race days it is an essential training tool for me. I check where the mile points are before going for a long run and check on my pacing. It's also great for interval training. The display is easy to read and the various buttons and functions are easy to figure out and use. I travel a lot internationally, and it has also become a great casual travel watch. The 2nd time zone setting is helpful, and especially being able to set a quick alarm has prevented me from accidentally missing a flight because I dozed off in the airport lounge. This is my 2nd time buying the exact same model. The battery on the first one died after almost exactly two years. I knew I could send it back to Timex for a new battery for $10, but I had a half-marathon coming up in a few days and wouldn't get it back in time, so I went to a local watch/jewelry place instead. They replaced the battery for $5 and it worked fine, but I don't think they got the waterproof seal re-inserted correctly, because when I got caught in a downpour the watch stopped working*. With another race coming up I searched the available options for new watches, and this is still the best model for my needs. One thing I will do differently is send the watch to Timex when the battery dies, as I expect they'll do a better job re-seating the waterproof seal. I got a prepaid mailer box from my local running store. *I put the soaked watch in a ziplock bag with some white rice and a dessicant packet. After a couple days (changing to fresh rice once a day) the watch display re-appeared just like new. In fact, it was only the display that stopped working, because it was still showing the correct time and had my mile split times up to the point it got soaked. I still wouldn't trust it around water, and I was going to keep it as a backup "dry weather" watch, but then my teenage asked for it so I gave it to him.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 23, 2013
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penlight
Louisville, US
★★★★★ 5
solid no nonsense watch
Color: Black/Yellow
This watch has many key features I needed in an everyday watch. - 5 separate alarms which you can set to a single day of week, weekend, weekday, or all week. useful for let's say trash day reminders or school day pickup reminders. The flexibility of the alarms is really key. - 9 interval countdown timers (repeats when done) - 1 countdown timer - stopwatch100 lap (more than enough) - indigo light, excellent nighttime illumination - excellent water resistance and durability. i've had mine for nearly 2 years and it still looks sharp. some of the lettering on the front has rubbed off, but most still visible, colors hold well. and i've put mine thru all sorts of abuse over the years. - large screen and digits for easy viewing at work. i have to record times at work so this was key. date and day of week is easily visible as well. - good battery life. if you don't use light a lot but use alarms regularly can last easily between 1-2 years - excellent price for about 30$ CONS: - no vibration, but i don't really need this - dual time zone... actually not ideal because you switch by pushing & holding the start/split button below the face. i accidentally seem to push and hold this button a lot thus it switches my timezone. i've gotten around this by just setting both times to be identical but a bit of a pain - resin band is durable but as always the little moving strap part to tuck away extra band breaks after a while. I discovered a neat trick to use my daughter's small hairband tie folded over twice to secure the extra band now. durable and doesn't look bad (if you pick the right color). - pain in the butt to change the battery (uses CR 2025 by the way). you have to remove both resin band parts first as it slightly overlaps the back case. then there are 4 tiny screws. once the bands are taken off it's pretty straight forward. make sure to align the thin rubber seal before you put the cover on. mine leaked water in after a change until I realized the seal was not sitting properly. Overall, I've been thru smartwatches, fancy watches, solar watches, ... mainly many casio and timex watches. this is by far one of the most practical and best watches I have. I'll be curious to see what google/apple create in the smartwatch category of the years.
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Reviewed in the United States on September 6, 2013

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