As your Philodendron Giganteum appears to be thriving, those droplets are most likely glucose sap - a natural secretion that occurs when plants are growing in optimal conditions. This is actually a positive sign indicating that your plant is healthy and happy.
Love your videos. I have a question. Is there a philodendron or monstera plant that grow large leaves but the plant itself stays small or short? I’m limited on space but love the large leaves. I can’t seem to find any information about plants with large leaves but short or small plant size.
Hey Sandy, thanks! I would say maybe you'd have success growing this plant or a monstera deliciosa, but a single plant (many plants have multiple "plants" in one pot). You could keep it prunes from the bottom and train the stem up a pole to keep things more compact. It would probably be easier to start with a small or medium-sized plant and train it as it goes.
Great job!
Thanks!
As your Philodendron Giganteum appears to be thriving, those droplets are most likely glucose sap - a natural secretion that occurs when plants are growing in optimal conditions. This is actually a positive sign indicating that your plant is healthy and happy.
Woo hoo! It is somewhat sticky, which is why I freaked out when I first saw it! But no issues here. Thanks!
Love your videos. I have a question. Is there a philodendron or monstera plant that grow large leaves but the plant itself stays small or short? I’m limited on space but love the large leaves. I can’t seem to find any information about plants with large leaves but short or small plant size.
Hey Sandy, thanks! I would say maybe you'd have success growing this plant or a monstera deliciosa, but a single plant (many plants have multiple "plants" in one pot). You could keep it prunes from the bottom and train the stem up a pole to keep things more compact. It would probably be easier to start with a small or medium-sized plant and train it as it goes.