SKU: 7471125917
indoor dracaena compacta

indoor dracaena compacta Compacta Dracaena

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Description

indoor dracaena compacta Compacta DracaenaDracaena fragrans 'Compacta' Dracaena fragrans 'Compacta' is a slow growing, plain green corn plant cultivar with short, glossy leaves packed closely around thick cane stems. The dense leaf heads sit tightly at the cane tips, giving the plant a full, compact outline in a relatively small footprint. The leaves are firm, slightly wavy along the margins, and arranged in clustered rosettes at the stem tips. Even smaller plants show a dense cane form with

Dracaena fragrans 'Compacta'

Dracaena fragrans 'Compacta' is a slow-growing, plain-green corn plant cultivar with short, glossy leaves packed closely around thick cane stems. The dense leaf heads sit tightly at the cane tips, giving the plant a full, compact outline in a relatively small footprint.

The leaves are firm, slightly wavy along the margins, and arranged in clustered rosettes at the stem tips. Even smaller plants show a dense cane form with dark-green crowns.

Compact leaf heads and slow cane growth

  • Growth habit: Slow, compact cane growth with dense leaf heads and short internodes.
  • Foliage: Solid dark green leaves with a glossy surface and short, broad proportions.
  • Indoor behaviour: Holds its shape well in containers and usually needs little pruning beyond old leaf removal.
  • Placement: Dense leaf heads and short internodes keep the plant manageable in smaller pots.

How 'Compacta' builds its shape

Dracaena fragrans grows naturally as a woody shrub or tree, but 'Compacta' is selected for a much tighter indoor habit. Its stems develop slowly, and each growing point produces a close cluster of leaves. Over time, older lower leaves may yellow and drop, gradually revealing more of the cane beneath the foliage.

Dracaena fragrans comes from tropical African regions, and 'Compacta' needs warm roots, free drainage and protection from cold, wet substrate. Average indoor humidity is usually adequate, but thick canes and firm leaves decline when the lower pot stays cold and saturated for long periods.

Care routine for dense cane growth

  • Position: Place it in bright to moderate filtered light. Growth slows in dim spaces, and the leaf heads can loosen if the plant sits too far from usable light.
  • Watering: Let the upper 40–50% of the potting mix dry before watering again, then drain fully. The compact leaf heads show moisture stress slowly, so check the mix before adding more water.
  • Root zone: Use an airy, well-drained indoor plant mix with mineral structure. A dense, water-holding mix increases the risk of cane and root problems.
  • Warmth: Keep it in normal warm room conditions, ideally above 18 °C. Cold window ledges, winter drafts, and unheated rooms can damage the roots before the leaves show stress.
  • Air moisture: Average indoor humidity is usually enough. Very dry air can contribute to crisp leaf tips, especially when paired with irregular watering or salty tap water.
  • Nutrients: Feed lightly during active growth. A slow-growing plant with compact stems does not need heavy fertilising.
  • Pot size: Repot only when roots have filled the pot or watering becomes difficult to manage. Moving up one pot size keeps the root zone more stable.
  • Grooming: Remove older yellow leaves close to the stem. If a cane becomes too tall, it can be cut during active growth and may reshoot below the cut.

Early warning signs on 'Compacta'

  • Brown tips: Check for dry stress, low humidity, salt build-up, or fluoride-sensitive foliage. Flush the pot occasionally and use rainwater or filtered water if your tap water is hard.
  • Soft cane base: Press the stem near the soil line. Soft tissue usually points to overwatering, cold substrate, or poor drainage.
  • Open leaf heads: If new growth spreads loosely and the plant leans, increase filtered light gradually.
  • Yellow lower leaves: A few older leaves are part of cane ageing. Several yellowing leaves at once mean the root zone, temperature or watering pattern needs checking.
  • Hidden pests: Inspect the tight leaf bases for mealybugs or scale, as dense foliage can hide early infestations.

Safe placement for a dense Dracaena

The leaves and stems contain saponins, so Dracaena fragrans 'Compacta' should stay away from pets or children likely to chew foliage. Remove fallen leaves if animals have access to the plant area.

Dracaena, fragrans and the compact cultivar name

The genus name Dracaena comes from Greek roots connected with a female dragon, a reference often associated with dragon trees and their red resin in some species. The species epithet fragrans refers to the fragrant flowers produced by mature plants, although flowering is uncommon indoors. The cultivar name 'Compacta' refers to short internodes, dense leaf heads and restrained container growth.

Dracaena fragrans 'Compacta' has dense dark-green leaf heads, slow cane growth and a compact container habit.

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A. Edwards
Belleville, US
★★★★★ 5
Excellent product.
Style: Standard Grip, Size: 50ft, Color: Chartreuse
I've dealt with many different brands of hoses, took into account quality and price. After many disappointing purchases I can finally say "I got the right one this time". It is exactly as advertised, lightweight, flexible and very easy to handle. You won't go wrong with Flexzilla garden hose!!!
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Reviewed in the United States on May 24, 2026
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levi clark
Cuba, US
★★★★★ 5
There is no substitute to Flexzilla Hose
Style: Standard Grip, Size: 100ft, Color: Chartreuse, Style: Standard Grip, Size: 100ft, Color: Chartreuse
I absolutely love this hose! I purchased roughly 300 feet last year for use in my garden. It's extremely light and durable when you are dragging it around. For the most part it is kink free. If there does happen to be a kink down the line, a quick tug fixes the problem. No leaks, no shrinkage. Easy to install on any hydrant. DEFINITELY compact compared to other heavy hoses. The best part, it's super easy to coil it back up and hang in the tool shed. So I ordered a couple more 100 footers. I will definitely buy more.
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Reviewed in the United States on April 17, 2026
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Abbe
Belleville, US
★★★★★ 1
PVC hose with high PHTHALATES, quickly develops black MOLD
Style: Standard Grip, Size: 3ft, Color: Chartreuse, Style: Standard Grip, Size: 3ft, Color: Chartreuse
TL, DNR ; PVC hose from Taiwan with a high level of toxic phthalates ; invaded by ineradicable sticky black mold in a few months ; the aluminum fitting can fuse to brass spigots by corrosion ; an unfriendly warranty, utterly distrustful of their customers. UPDATE. By early 2026 none of the health risks associated with this hose have decreased and remain a matter of high concern, particularly under the light of medical studies of phthalate toxicity. __ These are garden hoses produced by a company in Taiwan, which was listed in the past as a buyer of recycled plastic scrap. They are sourced by the marketer Weems Industries Inc. (IA), also doing business as Legacy Manufacturing Co., and sold under its Flexzilla brand. MATERIAL. The hyped "hybrid polymer" of Flexzilla hoses is just a plasticized polyvinyl chloride [PVC] compound. The hose consists of three layers. As described below, the analysis of a Flexzilla hose by a third-party professional lab discovered a high concentration of phthalate esters in all layers. Phthalates are toxic chemical additives widely used to make PVC flexible, and the lab finding indicates large amounts of PVC, even in the innermost layer touted as safe for water drinking. WATER SAFETY. In general, a PVC hose is much more likely to contain toxic contaminants (such as heavy metals, flame retardants, and phthalates) than a non-PVC hose, in particular when the PVC were recycled, and this is relevant to water safety. I did not find in the Legacy nor the Flexzilla website verifiable evidence supporting the PR pitch that the hoses are safe for water drinking. But in response to a 2017 customer query about water potability on the old Customer Q&A section --now later replaced by the 'ask Rufus' A-- Legacy claimed "the hose meets or exceeds the standards set by the National Sanitation Foundation" (amzn.to/2LCiKT6), which is a testing and certifying group that changed its name to NSF International more than 30 years ago. Nonetheless, at the time of this review, the NSF website does not list Legacy, Weems, or Flexzilla among those with NSF-certified products. Since the Legacy's claim could have meant testing by another party for conformance to water health-effect standards, I further searched the Web for NSF/ANSI test reports of Flexzilla hoses. I did not find any. But what I found was the _Garden Hose Study 2016_ from the Ecology Center (MI), a 55-year-old independent organization that tested 200+ hoses, including a 50-ft 5/8" Flexzilla garden hose whose material is listed just as "PVC". Multiple phthalates were detected in all layers of the hose, so --contrary to Legacy's touts of safety-- the hose was rated "HIGH" for phthalates, and received the negative evaluation of a "high overall level of concern" (see my figure with such test results). TOXICITY. Phthalates are additives for softening the PVC's vinyl and making it flexible. They are soluble in water and not bound to the vinyl, so they can easily leach into the water or the surface of a PVC hose, quite particularly if the hose were heated up by the sun. Phthalates can break down and enter the body via contact with the skin, along with ingestion or inhalation, where they act as estrogen-like anti-androgens. Exposure to them has been linked to feminizing effects on males by acting as endocrine disruptors, being able to reduce testosterone levels and impact hormone-sensitive brain development. Medical research has linked phthalate exposure to reproductive problems (PMID: 32961939), breast cancers (PMID: 30995175), and cardiovascular disease (PMID: 37269565). In fact, a global study of April 2025 estimated that about 350K heart-disease deaths were caused in 2018 alone by one phthalate still in use for tubing and other flexible plastics, even though it has been reported to cause chronic inflammation of arteries including those in the heart. These and others phthalates are commonly present in numerous other products. Despite this, only seven of the many industrially produced phthalates are restricted in the US (15 US Code §2057c), but just in products for children under 3 years of age, and toys for under 12. Be aware the current NSF/ANSI/CAN 61 standard does consider phthalates. This standard's purpose is to ensure that products and materials in contact with drinking water do not leach harmful contaminants into the water at unsafe levels, including phthalates. Further, all products sold in California containing any of a number of phthalates must display the Prop. 65 Warning: "this product contains one or more chemicals known to the State of California to cause cancer and birth defects or other reproductive harm", and Health & Safety Code notices of violation have been publicly filed against Legacy or Weems, or both, about phthalates in their products in that state. In spite of a clear familiarity with Prop. 65, Legacy did not disclose the warning on its Amazon webpages over several years. Further, Its reaction to queries about phthalates posted on the old Customer Q&A ranged from simply ignoring them, like a 2014 query (amzn.to/3cbugD9), to answers containing false claims that were never corrected, despite ample opportunity to do so, like its 2017 reply claiming the Flexzilla hose was "phathalate [sic] free" (amzn.to/2D5xQjT). Finally, perhaps relenting to criticism of non-transparent practices, in 2021 Legacy disclosed the Prop. 65 warning as a "Legal Disclaimer" above the Consumer Reviews section of this webpage. But even that was sloppily done -- in 6/2021, the warning did not appear if the 100-ft hose were selected; in 7/2022, it did not appear for the 50-ft, 75-ft, and 100-ft hoses; and in 1/2023, it again disappeared for the 100-ft hose. All diameter and length models of Legacy hoses deserve the toxicity warning. MOLD. Legacy claims the hose's outer layer "resists [...] mold". Nonetheless, about 4 months after I attached the new hose to a reel (so it was kept dry off the grass or any other wet surface), it began developing black mold, first only on its surface but later deeper. One of my attached pictures (taken after rubbing the hose with a dry paper towel to remove dirt) shows the initial surface mold, while its inset shows the same hose at the time it was installed. Not long after that, handling the black-moldy hose left sticky dark stains on my hand. This fungal invasion is neither an isolated nor a rare case, as evidenced by the large number of reviews here complaining about it (or as a "sticky goo" when touched). Mold-invaded objects are a potential health risk, and mold development in the hose's inner surface is a _major_ water safety risk. Black mold can produce highly potent mycotoxins, trichothecenes, which can reach harmful levels depending on fungal strain and growing conditions, and it can also release millions of tiny spores causing lung, ocular, and skin reactions in sensitized persons. Plasticized PVC is susceptible to fungal attack since the additives serve as a nitrogen or carbon source. The hose needs to be flushed thoroughly to wash away the mold flecks in the standing water inside. With a melamine sponge, I could remove some mold on the surface but not deeper in the tube's wall or inside -- surface cleaning is but a temporary cosmetic fix: the mold returned even after I removed the hose from the spigot and kept it in the garage. This is shown in my third photo, taken some months after having removed the moldy hose (which was hung in position for the sake of taking the picture). I contacted Legacy and spoke over the phone with a Tech Support agent, who told me, with the polite laconism recommended for legal cross-examinations, that the company does not deal with the mold invasion. After pressing the issue of health risks for my children, I was told "no mold was found in the inside of a moldy hose" Legacy claims to have cut open. Evidence of such a dissection or its results are not publicly available. In contrast, reviews here show the mold can indeed develop inside the hose. My opinion is that the company could hardly be more apathetic in relation to the potential health risk of the hoses it sells. WARRANTY. Its terms are customer-unfriendly. A defective hose would be replaced if you: [1] fill a form online ; [2] cut off both ends of the hose ; [3] cut off its defective part ; [4] cutoff the print band "Flexzilla by Legacy 5/8" ID Type 150 PSI W" on the hose, along with the 4-digit number ; and [5] mail the cut pieces to Legacy at your expense, along with [6] the proof of purchase and return mailing instructions. The hose has aluminum fittings, but no warranty coverage is provided for the highly likely possibility of the fitting _fusing_ to the brass thread of typical US house spigots due to galvanic corrosion. According to the Legacy's Tech Support, but not affirmed by judicial opinion, the mold development is not covered by the warranty -- tough luck for customers who bought hoses that became Moldy Black, a color quite unlikely to be trademarked by Weems anytime soon. It is censurable that Legacy imitates the three legendary Japanese monkeys, albeit changing the proverb to SEE NO MOLD, HEAR NO MOLD, SPEAK NO MOLD, and it is fair to conclude Legacy considers the development of mold too frequent to be covered by its unfriendly, penny-pinching warranty. ~~
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Reviewed in the United States on May 6, 2017
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Verified Purchase
Amazon Customer
Pawtucket, US
★★★★★ 5
Looking and acting great!
Style: Standard Grip, Size: 50ft, Color: Red Clay
As I unpacked this hose, I was dubious about its likelihood of not kinking. I stretched it out and untwisted the packing condition and waited 24 hours. I was more encouraged when I placed it on the hose rack and careful to keep it untwisted. I've used it a couple of times and so far, I'm impressed. It has not kinked once on a patio with lots of twists and turns and lots of items to get tangled upon. There has been no leaking and good water flow. I was a bit disappointed to see that the connections were composite and not brass but I should have been a more careful reader. We shall see how it holds up in the blistering Arizona sun. I love the muted clay red color on my red brick patio.
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Reviewed in the United States on April 21, 2026
C
Verified Purchase
crystal day
Waukegan, US
★★★★★ 5
Very comfortable
Size: 36" X 24", Color: Grey, Size: 36" X 24", Color: Grey
Very soft and dries fast. I did the scoot test on them to test the grip and they passed with flying colors. Got them on a limited deal and it was worth every penny. I will be purchasing more in different colors as there are plenty of options. I haven’t washed them yet but if there’s an issue, I will definitely update this review. They are nice and thick and fell good on your feet.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 28, 2026

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