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philodendron growth stages

philodendron growth stages Ring of Fire Plant

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Description

philodendron growth stages Ring of Fire PlantKey Highlights Ring of Fire The Philodendron ring of fire plant is known for its long, serrated leaves with dramatic, jagged edges, making it one of the most unique philodendron varieties. The Philodendron Ring of Fire is a climbing variety that naturally grows upward, using aerial roots to attach itself to trees or moss poles for support. The foliage displays an ever changing mix of green, yellow, orange, cream, and white, with each new leaf

Key Highlights – Ring of Fire

  1. The Philodendron ring of fire plant is known for its long, serrated leaves with dramatic, jagged edges, making it one of the most unique philodendron varieties.
  2. The Philodendron ‘Ring of Fire’ is a climbing variety that naturally grows upward, using aerial roots to attach itself to trees or moss poles for support.
  3. The foliage displays an ever-changing mix of green, yellow, orange, cream, and white, with each new leaf developing unpredictable variegation over time.
  4. The Philodendron ‘Ring of Fire’ is expensive due to its slow growth rate, rarity, and highly sought-after variegation.
  5. Like many philodendrons, it helps improve indoor air quality by filtering toxins and increasing oxygen levels in the home.

The Ring of Fire Plant, known as Philodendron ‘Ring of Fire’, is a highly sought-after tropical plant known for its striking foliage and vibrant color variations. This hybrid variety with long, serrated leaves, display an incredible mix of green, orange, yellow, and cream hues. Its rarity and climbing nature make it a prized addition for houseplant collectors and enthusiasts who appreciate unique and ornamental foliage plants. It is also valued for its ability to purify the air in homes and offices.

No two leaves are exactly alike, with each new leaf emerging in different shades and patterns, adding to its appeal. This makes it an exciting plant to grow, as its appearance changes over time. 

It grows in a vining or climbing manner, making it an excellent candidate for moss poles or trellises that support its upward growth.

When mature, the Philodendron ‘Ring of Fire’ can grow up to 8 feet tall and with spreads up to 6 feet wide.

Although it is slow-growing, patience is rewarded with spectacular foliage that develops more defined variegation as the plant matures.

One of its most distinguishing features is its elongated, deeply serrated large leaves.

Unlike many philodendrons with smooth edges, Ring of Fire has dramatic, jagged margins that enhance its tropical and exotic look.

The variegation ranges from bright yellow and orange to deep green and creamy white, creating a fiery effect that justifies its name. 

The flowers appear on a thin stalk and look like tiny spikes with pale yellow or white petals. Since flowering is rare, it does not impact the plant’s appeal as a decorative houseplant. 

Another fascinating aspect of the Philodendron ‘Ring of Fire’ is its ability to display different color phases throughout its life. Some leaves may emerge predominantly green with subtle splashes of yellow, while others can have intense orange or creamy white streaks. This ever-changing variegation adds an element of surprise and uniqueness, making it a favorite among collectors who enjoy dynamic, evolving plants. 

When and How to Water Your Ring of Fire Plant 

Philodendron ‘Ring of Fire’ is a relatively drought-tolerant plant, but it should not be allowed to dry out completely. This plant can withstand brief periods of dryness, thanks to its semi-succulent roots, but prolonged drought will lead to slowed growth and leaf curling. While it doesn’t demand frequent watering like some moisture-loving plants, it is essential to balance hydration to prevent stress. 

In the spring and summer, during the active growing season, water your Philodendron 'Ring of Fire' when the top 2 inches of soil feels dry. Depending on the environment, this typically means watering once every 5 to 7 days. Ensure that you water thoroughly until excess drains from the pot’s bottom, allowing the roots to receive ample hydration.  

In fall and winter, during the dormant season, the ring of fire plant’s water needs decrease as growth slows. Water only when the top 3-4 inches of soil is dry, which may extend the frequency to once every 10 to 14 days. Overwatering during this time can lead to root rot, so always check soil moisture before watering. If the indoor air is particularly dry due to heating systems, occasional misting can help maintain humidity without overwatering. 

Light Requirements – Where to Place Your Philodendron Ring of Fire 

When grown indoors as a houseplant, your Philodendron ‘Ring of Fire’ thrives in bright, indirect light for at least 6 to 8 hours daily.

A spot near a north or east-facing window is ideal, where the plant receives filtered sunlight without harsh direct exposure.

South and west-facing windows should have sheer curtains to diffuse strong rays, as too direct sun can scorch the delicate variegated foliage.

If natural light is limited, supplement with a full-spectrum grow light for 10-12 hours daily to maintain healthy growth.

For outdoor cultivation, this Philodendron plant thrives in partial shade to dappled sunlight, making it perfect for placement under a tree canopy or a covered patio.

It benefits from morning sun exposure for at least 2-4 hours and shade during the hottest parts of the day. Avoid prolonged exposure to intense afternoon sun, as it can cause leaf burns, especially on the lighter variegated sections. 

Optimal Soil & Fertilizer Needs 

Philodendron ‘Ring of Fire’ thrives in well-draining, nutrient-rich soil. Planting them in ordinary soil will result in compacted roots, stunted growth, and most likely root rot. Instead, make or buy a well-draining potting mix, or ideally use our specialized potting mix, opens in a new tab that contains 5 natural substrates and mycorrhizae to promote the development of a strong root system that helps your Philodendron plant to thrive. 

During the growing season in the spring, fertilize the plant once a year using a balanced NPK fertilizer. A formulation with lower parts of nitrogen and potassium such as 5-10-5, will encourage strong foliage growth and vibrant variegation. Organic alternatives like worm castings or compost can also provide slow-release nutrients. 

In fall and winter, reduce feeding as the plant’s growth naturally slows. Over-fertilizing during dormancy can lead to salt buildup and leaf discoloration. 

Hardiness Zones & More 

For growing indoors as a houseplant, ring of fire Philodendron requires temperatures between 65-80°F and humidity levels above 60% for optimal growth. Placing a humidifier nearby or using a pebble tray can help maintain consistent moisture in the air. Avoid placing the plant near heating vents or air conditioners, as sudden temperature fluctuations can cause stress. 

In the United States, this is mostly an indoor plant, but if you live in southern Florida or

Hawaii then you can cultivate it outdoor in USDA zones 9-11.

It thrives in high humidity environments but should be sheltered from direct afternoon sun to prevent leaf scorch.

If you grow outdoors in cooler zones, bring the plant indoors once temperature drops below 55°F to prevent cold damage.

Some variegation patterns may intensify or change slightly in response to different light conditions. 

Wildlife – Ring of Fire Flowers Attracts the Following Friendly Pollinators 

The Philodendron 'Ring of Fire' attracts pollinators, such as bees, butterflies, and hummingbirds with its creamy white to pale yellow flowers. The plant's flower structure and fragrance make it attractive to a variety of pollinators.

Butterflies
Bees
Hummingbirds
Lady Bugs
Multi Pollinators
Other Birds

According to ASPCA, the Philodendrons are mildly toxic to cats, dogs, and birds due to the presence of calcium oxalate crystals. Ingesting any part of the plant can cause oral irritation, drooling, vomiting, and difficulty swallowing, so keep it out of reach of pets. 

How to Propagate Your Ring of Fire Philodendron  

Philodendron ‘Ring of Fire’ is best propagated by stem cuttings. Select a healthy stem with at least two to three nodes and cut just below a node using sterilized shears. Remove any lower leaves and place the cutting in water or a well-draining potting mix. If using water propagation, change the water every few days until roots develop, then transfer the cutting to soil. Keep humidity high and provide indirect light to encourage healthy root formation.

The Bottom Line 

Overall, the Philodendron ‘Ring of Fire’ is a remarkable plant that combines striking coloration, serrated leaves, and a slow but rewarding growth habit. It’s rare and unpredictable variegation makes it highly desirable, while its relatively low-maintenance care needs make it accessible to both beginners and experienced plant lovers. It thrives in bright, indirect light, well-draining soil, and high humidity, making it a fantastic choice for both indoor and outdoor plant enthusiasts in warm climates.  Whether used as a statement piece in a houseplant collection or allowed to climb in a tropical indoor garden, this philodendron continues to captivate plant enthusiasts worldwide. 

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Brucers
Whiting, US
★★★★★ 5
An excellent product!
Style: AVR-X2800H, Style: AVR-X2800H
Happy and satisfied does not begin to describe my satisfaction in this Denon product! Setup was a snap, instructions were detailed, and the finale results were amazing. And yes I’m running a full 7.1 setup, sounds fantastic….
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Reviewed in the United States on May 19, 2026
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Amazon Customer
Alexandria, US
★★★★★ 5
Easy Set Up and Great Sound Distribution
Style: AVR-X3800H
I replaced an old Onkyo 535 with this Denon. It was a significant upgrade. There is zero noise, the Bluetooth is easy to use and provides excellent sound, and the HDMI circuitry is outstanding. The eARC capability is compatible with 2.1 HDMI, and it works seamlessly. Of note, I really like the way it provides the best sound configuration automatically for each source, and I don't have to switch around to find the best sound option. For example, if the source is compatible with Atmos, it provides Atmos. If it's only compatible with Dolby surround, it switches to that. Finally, the distribution of sound is superb. I have a 7.1 speaker configuration of mostly mid-level speakers, and the Denon uses them to their fullest. Rear sounds come clearly from the rear...same with each side, etc. And most of all, I don't have to tweak the system to get that. I just used the provided microphone and ran the set up (which was really easy), and I have really great sound. This unit is a good value.
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Reviewed in the United States on January 28, 2026
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Reviewer JR
Draper, US
★★★★★ 4
Expensive, but nice
Style: AVR-X4800H
I previously owned a Denon AVR-2808ci since 2008. That model's remote control didn't work well, and all controls were unnecessarily convoluted, so I was hesitant to buy another Denon. The thing that made me give them another chance is that the sound quality was nice, and I was hoping their engineers learned from their mistakes. I'm glad I gave them the chance. This new model, the AVR-X4800H, also has excellent sound quality; however, unlike the old one I had, the controls on both the receiver itself, and especially on the remote control, are significantly improved. The controls are intuitive, and everything works perfectly. That alone made me happy with the purchase; however, the ability to run 4k @ 120 hz for video gaming, and with extra HDMI ports they have here, all added to that value quite a bit. Then, in addition to that, the old model I had ran super hot. In fact, so hot, from just basic usage, it fried itself three different times in the span of a couple weeks (during the winter time), and it kept being repaired under warranty, until they replaced the top grate with one that allows more ventilation. However, this new model doesn't appear to suffer from that same issue. It gets pretty warm, but nowhere near what the old one did -- and I'm using the same Bose Surround Sound system with the new one. That said, as a precaution, I went ahead and ordered an AC Infinity AirCom to put on top of it, to assist with cooling/ventilation, which has worked wonderfully as well. No the tempts on this Denon AVR have never gone above 87 deg, even on a warm room on the third floor during the late spring / summer time. The other hesitancy I had was the price tag. I only purchased it because it was on a "25% discount", from $2500 down to around $1850. Granted, it was similar when I purchased the other one 15 years ago, but it's just an awful lot of money, in my humble opinion. I would say it was borderline on whether I would buy it for this amount, and if it went up at all, I wouldn't have purchased it. I may not purchase it again for this price, especially if I have one already that is working well -- it was only the wonky one that I already owned, that I just wanted to get rid of, that put more pressure to give them one more chance. With a working device, I probably wouldn't pay these prices again. But, if it were a few hundred dollars cheaper, then I probably would buy it again. Hopefully this helps someone. It's a great device, just a bit expensive. And, if you get it, I would still recommend getting a top cooling fan for it.
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Reviewed in the United States on June 13, 2024
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B. Husher
Battle Creek, US
★★★★★ 5
Solid Next-Generation AVR.
Style: AVR-X2800H
I bought this for my 2.1 system used for TV (4K with 120 Hz), movies, video games (4K with 120 Hz), turntable, and digital audio. I have previously used Denon, Marantz, and NAD AVRs. I was using an old NAD without HDMI, and I really wanted everything to synch up. I tried out a stereo receiver since I am only running a 2.1, but I didn't mesh for me. It was fine, but I felt it was lacking especially around multi-channel audio and the lack of an LFE output for the sub. The 2800H was very intuitive and easy to set up right out of the box. Hooked up to a TV, it runs through everything step-by-step. After the initial setup, I downloaded and ran a firmware update. When I finally got to use my ears, the sound was already superior to what I had from the mid-2000s 60-watt-per-channel NAD AVR with an external Bluetooth/DAC and PCM cable from the TV AND the brand-new, 2023 model HDMI-equipped stereo receiver (that cost me more than the 2800H). After running Audyssey, the sound only got better. Then, I set up my 2 front speakers on a bi-amp setting, utilizing two of my unused channels to drive my woofer and tweeter with discrete power sources. The eARC and settings makes turning on my TV, PS5, and AVR easier and quicker. I enjoy the fact that I can use any remote to fix the volume so there is always a remote close when we need a quick mute or change in the volume. I find the HEOS app to be a little clunky, but I am loving it anyway. I can run high-definition audio through streaming, which is a huge improvement from using Apple Airplay 2 or Bluetooth. It also lets me talk on the phone, send and receive messages, etc. without interrupting the music. Right now, I am still tweaking my settings, but I can definitely say that the sound is really good. Have I heard better? Sure. This isn't an 11-channel receiver with Dirac, a 200 watt-per-channel, high-end "audiophile"-grade component, or a tube amp. It is best at multi-channel audio and does really well for music, especially with a good set of speakers and quality sub with parametric EQ. My speakers have are low sensitivity (84dB), and the 2800H puts out enough grunt to listen give nuance and life to music in listening position, to bump the music to listen in my kitchen two rooms over, or watch at theater-level volume in my medium-sized living room with 8-foot ceilings. This thing is getting daily use, and it is more than enough to get the job done in style. For what I need, the 2800H is spot on.
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Reviewed in the United States on November 9, 2023
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Mike
Boise, US
★★★★★ 5
Excellent receiver next to the competition
Style: AVR-X2800H
Amazon has had some really good prices on the Amazon days so I bought a new receiver. Now I recently bought a AVR-S960H in 2022 which was excellent but I was needing another receiver. I originally reviewed the S960H comparing against an Onkyo back in 2022. I mistakenly stated the Onkyo was a TX-NR6100, which it was a TX-NR6050. Very similar with the NR6100 having THX and 10 more watts of power. This year I bought the Onkyo TX-NR6100 hoping it was better than the TX-NR6050 which it was in sound quality only, equaling the Denon AVR-S960H and Denon AVR-X2800H. However the Onkyo TX-NR6100 just doesn't compare with missing features, weird on-line manuals that have numerous inaccuracies, and weird, none standard Dolby decoding that is mentioned in the manuals. The biggest problem that I was hoping was corrected with a firmware update for the 2 years that passed with the TX-NR6050 was the incorrect speakers, playing the wrong dolby discrete channels. As I stated this is even mentioned in the manual as Onkyo thinks this is alright. I have a 7.1 speaker setup and listen to discrete 5.1 Dolby soundtracks of Concert Music Videos. I want to listen to the soundtrack discrete with no up mixing with a 5.1 speaker 'output'. The Onkyo's surround channel signals will only play out of the 'back' surround speakers leaving the surround speakers quiet. This is by design and acknowledged in the manual! This made the sound inferior and unacceptable to me. My Denon receivers play the surround channels correctly through the surround speakers. Then the above goes one step further in displaying the incorrect number of channels output in the on-screen display on your tv. It will say a 5.1 signal input to 7.1 speakers output. This is wrong and should say 5.1 signal input to 5.1 speakers output. Since the "back" speakers are playing, it somehow thinks that the output is 7.1 speakers when only 5.1 speakers are playing, even if it is the wrong speakers. Also the Onkyo has no HDR10+ for it's 3 inputs that aren't 8K compatible. Not good IMO. So with the quirks in the Onkyo TX-NR6100, I sent it back. I replaced it with a Denon AVR-X2800H. I could had replaced the Onkyo with a Denon AVR-S970H but I wanted the added room correction upgrade with the X2800 which is Audyssey MultiEQ XT, S970 has standard MultiEQ, no XT. Plus the X2800 in a 5.1 speaker setup will allow Speakers B to be assigned to the back surround speaker outputs or BIAMP if you have the need with your speakers. The S970 will not do that. The X2800 also has Zone 2 preamp outputs that the S970 does not. Also the X2800 has one year longer warranty than the S970. The X2800 also has 5 more watts/channel than the S970. At the time I bought during Amazon days, the X2800 was less than $200 more than the S970, so I bought the X2800. The X2800 steers the correct surround channels to the correct surround speakers unlike the Onkyo and sounds just as good if not better. I have more features and a long warranty with the Denon AVR-X2800H as well over the Onkyo. Also the Denon has HDMI 2.1 inputs for all 6 inputs and will play HDR10+ on all 6 HDMI inputs, that the Onkyo can not! I honestly have nothing to complain about the Denon. It does everything right and sounds great! It's also compatible with 8K60p(A) "UNCOMPRESSED" and 4K120p unlike some. I didn't look at the Yamaha RX-V6A/RX-A2A twins as they were not compatible with 8K60p(A) "UNCOMPRESSED" , just 8K60p(B) "COMPRESSED". They were the same price as the Denon AVR-S970H and AVR-X2800H models. That being Yamaha RX-V6A price about same as Denon AVR-S970H, and Yamaha RX-A2A about same as Denon AVR-X2800H. The Yamaha model compatible with 8K60p (A) "UNCOMPRESSED" is the more expensive RX-A4A but I seen no comparable pricing around what the Denon AVR-X2880H was selling at. Very similar to the Denon but more power with pre-amp outputs. I didn't need either for the hundreds more it was selling at. The Denon AVR-X2800H is the best bang for your buck 7.1 receiver right now IMO.
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Reviewed in the United States on September 21, 2024

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