SKU: 47344355958
mini elephant ear plant

mini elephant ear plant Elephant Ear – Plant Detectives

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Description

mini elephant ear plant Elephant Ear – Plant DetectivesElephant Ear (Alocasia spp.) Elephant Ear is a bold tropical plant group valued for dramatic foliage, strong architectural form, and lush texture in indoor and outdoor displays. Depending on the species or cultivar, Alocasia can range from compact tabletop houseplants to large patio or landscape specimens with oversized leaves. Most selections are grown for their striking foliage rather than flowers, making them useful for adding height, contrast, and

Elephant Ear (Alocasia spp.)

Elephant Ear is a bold tropical plant group valued for dramatic foliage, strong architectural form, and lush texture in indoor and outdoor displays. Depending on the species or cultivar, Alocasia can range from compact tabletop houseplants to large patio or landscape specimens with oversized leaves. Most selections are grown for their striking foliage rather than flowers, making them useful for adding height, contrast, and tropical character to containers, interiors, patios, and seasonal garden beds. With bright filtered light, warmth, humidity, rich well-drained soil, and steady moisture, Elephant Ear brings high-impact foliage to spaces where shape and texture matter.

Distinctive Features

Elephant Ear plants are known for their large, often arrow-shaped, heart-shaped, or shield-like leaves held on sturdy upright petioles. Foliage varies widely by type, with colors and patterns that may include glossy green, dark green, bronze, black, silver, gray-green, bold veins, variegation, or textured surfaces. Many Alocasia selections form upright clumps from rhizomes, tubers, or corm-like structures and can produce offsets over time. Flowers may appear as a spathe and spadix on mature plants, but they are usually secondary to the foliage and are not the main reason most gardeners grow Alocasia.

Growing Conditions

  • Sun: Grows best in bright indirect light, filtered sun, or partial shade, with protection from harsh direct afternoon sun that can scorch the foliage.
  • Soil: Prefers fertile, organically rich, well-drained soil or a chunky indoor aroid mix that holds light moisture while allowing good airflow around the roots.
  • Water: Performs best with consistent moisture during active growth, allowing the upper portion of the soil to dry slightly before watering again, while avoiding soggy conditions.
  • USDA Zones: Most types are best grown outdoors year-round only in frost-free tropical to subtropical climates, generally USDA Zones 10 to 12, though cold tolerance varies by species and cultivar.
  • Mature Size: Typically ranges from about 1 to 8 feet tall and wide depending on type, with compact jewel alocasias staying small and larger elephant ear selections becoming much more substantial.
  • Habit: Forms an upright, clumping tropical plant with bold leaves rising from the base on sturdy petioles.

Ideal Uses

  • Focal Point: Use as a dramatic foliage focal point in bright indoor rooms, patio containers, entry planters, poolside plantings, courtyard gardens, or protected tropical-style beds.
  • Houseplant: Grow compact selections indoors where bright indirect light, warmth, humidity, and careful watering can support healthy foliage.
  • Patio Container: Plant larger selections in decorative containers for summer impact that can be moved indoors or protected before frost.
  • Tropical Garden: Pair with caladiums, cannas, bananas, gingers, ferns, begonias, and other bold foliage plants for a layered warm-season display.
  • Collector Plant: Feature unusual selections with dark foliage, silver veining, variegation, or textured leaves in specialty indoor plant collections.

Low Maintenance Care

  • Watering: Water when the upper soil begins to dry, then allow excess water to drain fully so the roots stay evenly moist but never waterlogged.
  • Humidity: Provide moderate to high humidity indoors to help reduce leaf edge browning and support clean foliage growth.
  • Light Care: Keep plants in bright filtered light and rotate containers occasionally to encourage balanced growth.
  • Fertilizing: Feed during the active growing season with a balanced fertilizer to support steady foliage production.
  • Overwintering: Move container plants indoors before cold weather or protect them from frost, since most Alocasia are not reliably hardy in freezing climates.
  • Leaf Cleanup: Remove yellowing, damaged, or tired leaves as needed to keep the plant looking clean and encourage fresh growth.

Why Choose Elephant Ear?

  • Bold Foliage: Produces large, dramatic leaves that bring strong tropical texture and visual impact to indoor and outdoor spaces.
  • Wide Variety: Includes compact tabletop types, dark-leaved collector plants, variegated selections, and large patio or landscape specimens.
  • Architectural Form: Adds upright structure and height without relying on flowers for ornamental value.
  • Container Friendly: Works well in decorative pots where plants can be enjoyed outdoors in warm weather and protected indoors before cold temperatures arrive.
  • Tropical Effect: Brings lush, resort-style character to patios, pool areas, bright interiors, seasonal displays, and protected garden beds.

Elephant Ear is an excellent choice for gardeners and houseplant collectors who want bold foliage, strong structure, and tropical character. Whether used as a compact indoor accent or a large seasonal container feature, Alocasia offers dramatic leaves, varied colors and textures, and a high-impact presence that can transform bright indoor spaces, patios, and warm-season plantings.

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S. Mccosky
Birmingham, US
★★★★★ 5
Don’t slip around!
Color: Collagen
Love how these don’t slip around! Great to use while doing makeup on eyes to lift up the under eye area! Highly recommend
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Reviewed in the United States on May 26, 2026
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Ricky varela
Lexington, US
★★★★★ 5
Amazing for under eyes!
Color: Collagen
I have pretty intense dark under eye bags and this product helps shrink them and moisturize the eye area all day! Also gives me a nice glow!
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Reviewed in the United States on May 26, 2026
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Arturo Brillembourg
Massapequa, US
★★★★★ 5
Understand the past to shape our future
Format: Kindle
I’m grateful Ray Dalio has shared his world view and his access to leading thinkers and valuable sources of data, to make me more aware and better prepared for what’s coming. I am also friends with Ray, and I trust him. This book offers at least two major contributions. First, the synthesis and integration of economic, social, and geopolitical history that presents a holistic view of how countries rise and fall. Leveraging his relationships with leading thinkers and historians, Ray gives us a way to understand the major forces, cycles, and paradigm shifts that can dramatically change the world around us. You would have to read dozens of well-chosen books to gain such an understanding, and you still may not have a comprehensive theory. Second, the quantification of each major nation’s economic, cultural, and geopolitical health. With the support of Bridgewater’s multi-hundred-million-dollar research budget and team, Ray presents the key determinants of a country’s strengths and weaknesses through time, and relative to other countries. Seeing the most important long-term trends in charts provide useful perspectives that are unavailable elsewhere. Here are some of my biggest take-aways. Disorderly conflict is the pre-cursor to destructive conflict that is likely to be devastating for all of us. Both the winners and the losers of destructive actions are worse off relative to compromise, mutual understanding, and respect. As an American, I should not take for granted that I live in the most powerful country that has seen one of the longest periods of peace, economic growth, and innovation in global history. It’s not the norm, and if we aren’t careful, things could get a lot worse. Invest in innovation. Both as an investor and as a citizen, innovation has been a powerful force for improving lives and driving economic growth. We are likely in for a period of high inflation. The easiest way for the government to deal with high levels of debt is by printing money, using stimulus to spur economic growth, and keeping interest rates lower than nominal GDP growth. That is, to inflate their way out of debt. As an investor, he suggests avoiding long term holdings of cash and bonds. Instead, he recommends diversifying with assets that can do well in an inflationary environment, like highly dependable cash generating stocks, some gold (possibly a little cryptocurrency), and other scarce inflation-protected assets. This book is a major contribution. I strongly recommend reading or listening to it. If you don’t have the time, at least read the first few pages of the introduction, the first chapter “The Big Cycle in a Tiny Nutshell”, chapter 8 "The Last 500 Years in a Tiny Nutshell", and the final chapter called “The Future”. I hope you found this helpful.
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Reviewed in the United States on December 5, 2021
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Mike Dillemuth
Phoenix, US
★★★★★ 5
A Captivating Look at Empires and America’s Future
Format: Kindle
This is an extraordinary book. Although it’s written by an economist, it is anything but boring. The author does an outstanding job of examining multiple empires across hundreds of years. He analyzes the rise and fall of each empire by segmenting their respective histories into different cycles. He then identifies the various cycles that each empire goes through, from its initial rise to its eventually fall. Each cycle is sub divided into key indicators such as military strength, budget deficits, wealth gaps, education, etc. In the end, the author looks at the United States using this same cyclical methodology. Mr. Dalio’s arguments and analysis are sound and make good sense. His interpretation and description of various historical events, especially those pertaining to the British and Dutch empires, are right on target. Throughout the book, he is consistent in the application of his analytic model. This is noteworthy as I felt his analysis of China to be slightly flawed. The author appears to have omitted certain elements of modern-day China; most notably is the pending population time bomb caused by their previous one child policy. China’s population is now shrinking. In addition, and unlike America, the Chinese seem culturally incapable of using immigration to solve their problem. This opposing view of China, however, does not detract from the author’s overall analysis. He is consistent in his analysis and cites other data which support counter arguments. Bottom line, this book was far more interesting than I anticipated. Even though the author’s analysis is complex, the book is well written and easy to understand. The narrative is both captivating and entertaining. Overall, this is just a great book.
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Reviewed in the United States on December 17, 2023
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LenZen
Whiting, US
★★★★★ 4
Is the United States Getting Close to Multiple Simultaneous Crises?
Format: Hardcover
In this book, Dalio presents his model of the rise and fall of "empires". The closer it gets to the present day the more interesting the book is. The last three chapters of the book which deal with the rise of China, the current tensions between China and the US, the United States's alleged decline and Dalio's conjectures regarding the future are five stars. The build up to the final three chapters is decent, although only occasionally riveting: The book is only three stars before the strong close. It is hard to evaluate the merits of Dalio's historical model given that he is only presenting it at moderate depths so as to introduce it all in one volume. The model says that empires rise and fall, no surprise, and talks about the interplay of economic, internal, and external factors that take an empire through the cycle. Dalio also mentions that inside the Big Cycle there are other cycles, and inside those cycles other cycles. He does not, however, go into much detail regarding the sub-cycles. This sounds reminiscent of Robert Prechter's Elliot Waves or perhaps, even, pre-Copernican astrology. Is this a model so loose, like Elliot Waves, that it can be found to fit anything that could happen? Is it falsifiable? Along the way was the validity tested by approaching an empire that there was little prior knowledge of to make "forward predictions" regarding what would happen? Has Dalio merely cherry picked the three examples which best seem to demonstrate the soundness of the model while omitting more problematic cases? There is not enough in this book to do a rigorous analysis. The United States Civil War is a good example of something I had trouble thinking about in terms of the model. According to the model the final stage in an empire's breakdown is civil war or revolution. In the case of the United States, however, the Civil War occurred while the United States was still ascendant: in stage 2 out of 6 with stage 3 being the peak. Certainly there was no debt crisis which caused the Civil War and the United States had little going on in terms of external conflict at the time. So perhaps that could have been taken as a "prediction" that the United States would almost certainly have survived the Civil War in tact? The truth, however, is that the South came very close to winning the Civil War, in the sense of being recognized as independent, according to McPherson's Battle Cry of Freedom. Another thing that I am not sure how to evaluate using the model is the United States after the Civil War and after the Revolution. Although these were periods of rebuilding they do not seem to fit well into Dalio's model. After victory in these conflicts Americans were very magnanimous (as it was later after World War II). Far from being purged those who were on the wrong side of history ended up facing rather little in the way of consequences. So how does this fit into the model? Obviously, there will be some "rebuilding" after a Revolution or Civil War so is the model just saying there will be something which could not not happen? Indeed although the United States was vibrant after the Revolution, the period after the Civil War as described in Richard White's The Republic for Which it Standards seems in decline compared to the Antebellum period. According to Dalio's model, however, the United States was stage 2 rising into stage 3 during this period. Regardless of the merits of the model, which would probably require many in depth books to evaluate fully, there is definitely some good high level overviews of Chinese, European, and American history. There are many interesting charts and statistics thrown in. As mentioned, the close of the book is far and away the best part of it. Dalio describes the cultural differences between Americans and Chinese people and their different outlooks toward governing. Dalio does not seem to be pushing any political agenda, at least not too hard, but rather what he has carefully measured to be objectively true. Although clearly an admirer of much about China, he is also willing to criticize some aspects of China. At the same time, his criticism omits its surveillance state. Looking forward Dalio presents some very interesting charts and statistics regarding America's growing internal conflicts. He even has a graph to show how bad it is now compared to early points in history. Dalio is willing to stick his neck out and quantify what his model is predicting as the probability of civil war in the United States and the probability of military war with China in the next decade. Although very thought provoking overall, one particularly persistent problem throughout the book is that many of the charts are very hard to read. There are graphs with eight different lines with some of the colors very hard to distinguish between. The book also almost never references its sources. Indeed, given how much history Dalio has obviously studied, a bibliography, or at least a list of recommendations, would be very nice. Dalio is very repetitive regarding the inevitable death of fiat currencies through money printing. At the same time he also does provide concrete advise of how to prepare. He gives some definite timelines and the dates are very close. To qualify this, somewhat, however, his company Bridgewater Associates has basically had a "lost decade" using his models to generate any kinds of returns since his departure around 2012. Nevertheless it is interesting to think about whether or the US is on the verge of multiple simultaneous crises.
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Reviewed in the United States on February 1, 2022

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