SKU: 72924062252
dieffenbachia big leaves

dieffenbachia big leaves Dieffenbachia 'Big Ben' | Large Cane

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Description

dieffenbachia big leaves Dieffenbachia 'Big Ben' | Large CaneDieffenbachia 'Big Ben' Tall crown Dieffenbachia structure Broad patterned leaves gather along the upper cane of Dieffenbachia 'Big Ben', giving this indoor aroid a taller vertical profile. Maturing plants carry their newest foliage high on upright stems, giving the plant a tall cane form outline in the pot. Because the foliage sits high on the stem, the pot and root ball play a visible role in the plants shape. A weighty container, regular rotation

Dieffenbachia 'Big Ben'

Tall-crown Dieffenbachia structure

Broad patterned leaves gather along the upper cane of Dieffenbachia 'Big Ben', giving this indoor aroid a taller vertical profile. Maturing plants carry their newest foliage high on upright stems, giving the plant a tall cane-form outline in the pot.

Because the foliage sits high on the stem, the pot and root ball play a visible role in the plant’s shape. A weighty container, regular rotation and consistent watering keep the crown balanced as new leaves expand.

Dieffenbachia 'Big Ben' traits

  • Cane-form Dieffenbachia with upright growth
  • Broad patterned foliage carried on strong petioles
  • Upper-crown growth that becomes clearer with maturity
  • Thick stem structure typical of indoor Dieffenbachias
  • Container stability that becomes more important as the crown develops

Cane structure and mature outline

'Big Ben' carries broad patterned foliage on upright Dieffenbachia canes. Dieffenbachia seguine is an accepted tropical American aroid species with stout stems, large leaves and sheathing petioles.

Flowering may occur on mature Dieffenbachia as a spadix and spathe. In indoor pots, cane firmness, crown balance and clean leaf expansion are the clearest growth signals.

Dieffenbachia 'Big Ben' indoor care

  • Light: Place in bright indirect light, then turn the pot every few weeks for even crown development.
  • Watering: Water deeply once the top 3–4 cm of substrate has dried. Check more often in warm months when the crown is actively producing leaves.
  • Substrate: Use a chunky, humus-rich aroid mix with bark and mineral aeration so the roots receive moisture and oxygen together.
  • Pot choice: Use a weighty pot with enough mass to balance the cane and upper foliage.
  • Temperature: Keep around 18–27 °C and place away from cold draughts or cold window glass.
  • Humidity: Moderate humidity reduces edge browning as new leaves expand. Dry heat plus irregular watering often shows as edge browning.
  • Feeding: Feed monthly at low to moderate strength while the plant is producing new leaves. Reduce feeding as growth slows in winter.
  • Repotting: Repot when roots fill the pot or water runs through too quickly. Keep the cane base level with the substrate surface.
  • Pruning and staking: Remove fully yellow lower leaves. A taller cane can be steadied with a discreet stake or propagated from a top cutting.

Big Ben crown checks

  • Crown loses lift: Check the root ball first. A dry root ball and a waterlogged root ball can both reduce water uptake.
  • Brown patches on pale tissue: Look for direct sun, heat through glass or uneven moisture while new leaves are expanding.
  • Tilting stem: Review pot weight, crown direction and the plant’s angle toward the light.
  • Stem base softness: Inspect the cane base and roots, then improve drainage around the lower stem.
  • Fine speckling or dull leaves: Check the undersides of leaves and petiole bases for mites, especially in warm, dry air.

Big Ben cane work and safety

Dieffenbachia 'Big Ben' has irritating sap in stems and leaves, with calcium oxalate raphides that can affect the mouth and throat on contact and may bother skin or eyes. Set the pot where pets and children cannot chew the stems, then clean hands, tools and surfaces after cane work.

Big Ben aroid family and growth

Dieffenbachia belongs to Araceae. Many dumb cane plants share upright canes, sheathing petioles and patterned foliage.

Dieffenbachia 'Big Ben' develops a taller cane-form outline with broad cream-splashed leaves above the pot.

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SKU: 72924062252

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Good For Heavy Chewers So Far
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Solid quality. My Doberman is a power chewer and I am looking for a toy that he can't destroy in 2 seconds. If a ball lasts more than an hour it is a miracle. It has a sturdy design and is more heavy weight than the other "non-destructible" balls he has. He has only had his ball for one day so we will see how long this ball lasts him. It is the size of a tennis ball, firm, little to no bounce, and seems built for heavy chewing.
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Reviewed in the United States on January 30, 2026
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Grantham, US
★★★★★ 5
Great Product, 2 years and running!
Color: Onyx Black - Most Durable
It’s been almost 2 years and my dogs haven’t destroyed them yet. I have a Pitbull and a Pit/Cosro mix. They destroy every toy we’ve given them, except these toys. Great product 100% worth the money
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Tony Ahearn
Battle Creek, US
★★★★★ 5
Perfect for HEAVY chewers
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My dog is a heavy chewer. Destroys everything that’s not very hard rubber, hard plastic, or hard material. He LOVES this ball. I think it’s his favorite. Plus, it bounces great so you can play with your dog. Very well constructed- probably indestructible or will at least last a very long time. Easily worth the money.
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Evan J.
Natrona Heights, US
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The only toy my dogs can’t destroy and love
Color: Onyx Black - Most Durable
I am thrilled to have found one toy my dogs don’t destroy immediately. They have torn up Fenrir hammers, the black kongs of all sizes, the monster k9 stick, nylabones, and they don’t like the goughnut at all (it stinks like a bad tire). This is the first one they both love and haven’t been able to destroy immediately. It does allow little tooth marks, but that’s what makes it fun for them. They are very happy playing with it and I’d say this one was worth every dollar. Update Months Later: We’ve gone through 2/3 now. I got two initially, and one has lasted long term. They still haven’t completely destroyed it. They did destroy a second one quickly so I suspect a flaw in it. They sent me a new one and they took a while, but they did destroy the third to the point we had to throw it away. Despite that, one still remains and our dogs still love it. It’s still the best for the money compared to others. We have two Bully XL’s that are each close to 100 pounds.
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Birmingham, US
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Indestructible
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This is actually indestrutible! Be careful though, it's wicked hard/heavy. It isn't a ball you want banging into things. Use outside!!
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