I am a philodendron producer in Rio de Janeiro and came across this video and have to say it is excellent! Really high level, direct information. Thank you.
This is all the info I was looking for!! Thanks you also bought a mislabelled Nangaritense but im pretty happy with the Fuzzy guy but its nice to confirm what ai have. Hi from SA😊
Yes i did see that they are often confused and thought about adding it but didn’t have the plant on hand to do any comparisons, if i do get one in the future I might do a follow up video
I bought one advertised as "nangaritense fuzzy petiole". I am now a bit disappointed I won't be seeing those awesome red leaves but oh well. I am wondering what the scientific name of fuzzy petiole is.
Thanks for this video. It has definitely cleared up which one I have which is the “fuzzy petiole”. However this begs another question. I can’t seem to find the actual scientific name for “fuzzy petiole”. Every search I do it lists it as nangaritense. So this is still confusing. If these are two different species then the left one “fuzzy petiole” which is the one I have, should have its own scientific name should it not? I’m a stickler for taxonomy so I definitely want to know what’s going on here. Lol. Thanks so much again for the great video!
I believe that it is still an undescribed species, so it doesn't have a taxonomic name unfortunately. Similar to el choco red before it became rubrijuvenile
A US big box store (home improvement shop) chain, The Home Depot, probably the largest of its kind, is now selling Philodendron 'Fuzzy Petiole' as P. nangaritense on the website. It will increase the confusion. I have both. the nangaritense looks similar to the Philodendron lynamii. The Fuzzy Petiole looks similar to the rubrocinctum platinum.
Yeah i see fuzzy petiole being sold as nagaritense a LOT! Also see a lot of care videos for Nangaritense where the plant is in fact fuzzy petiole so that’s why i thought this might be a good video to make. DI know the lynamii is probably more similar but there doesn’t seem to be as much confusion about that plant
@@sutchplants3226 I find the Fuzzy Petiole to be similar in some ways to P rubrocinctum. Now the Fuzzy Petiole is readily available in the USA, but it does not look to sell much among the general public. It seems more tolerant of low humidity of general apartments (I am in NY where half of the year the relative humidity is in the low 20s%
Yes its the same here, in our winter months humidity drops way down to between 10 or 20% but my fuzzy petiole has done really well even at those humidity levels
I am a philodendron producer in Rio de Janeiro and came across this video and have to say it is excellent! Really high level, direct information. Thank you.
Thanks so much, that’s really kind of you to say
Ooo so happy to see this, I sell plants at a local market, our plants in SA is allways mislabeled - please do more of this type of videos
Thanks for this video! It's hard to find definitive information on the differences between these two plants.
Thanks for explaining because I couldn’t understand the difference, for the life of me!!! 😂
This is all the info I was looking for!! Thanks you also bought a mislabelled Nangaritense but im pretty happy with the Fuzzy guy but its nice to confirm what ai have. Hi from SA😊
Yeah all the big nurseries that sell them here have them mislabelled, I love mine too, I have it on a moss pole and it’s getting giant now
Cool topic to distinguish the differences between these two. Philodendron Lynamii could be added, as its often confused for Nangaritense.
Yes i did see that they are often confused and thought about adding it but didn’t have the plant on hand to do any comparisons, if i do get one in the future I might do a follow up video
species is always lowercase. Philodendron lynamii, nangaritense.
Very interesting and very clear and helpful distinguishing photos. Thank you!
amazing info, thank you! can't wait for the nangaritense to come in the mail!
Thank you. Helpful to me as I just brought a fuzzy petiole home.
Excellent information. Thank 😊 you
Thank You! Such useful info. I finally know what I have. Cheers!
Thank you thank you thank you.!
I have an Ecuagenera Nangaritense 💚💚💚
I bought one advertised as "nangaritense fuzzy petiole". I am now a bit disappointed I won't be seeing those awesome red leaves but oh well. I am wondering what the scientific name of fuzzy petiole is.
Me too!
Is fuzzy petiole climber or crawler? I found conflicted information on the internet.thank you
Nevermind you answered my question, thanks 👍🏾
Very nice video! Is the fuzzy petiole a crawler philodendron?
Heya sorry about the late reply, fuzzy petiole is a climbing plant, really sizes up nicely on a pole
Oh my god… my Nan is a Fuzzy!!! It was mislabeled at the nursery!
Ha ha ha, i am still amazed at how often nurseries get this wrong. I wonder how it even started. Must be a supplier issue
Fuzzy Petiole is a trailing philodendron, BUT the Nangaritense it's a crawler because I have the two in my garden.
I do mention that it’s a crawler in the video 👍🏼
Thanks for this video. It has definitely cleared up which one I have which is the “fuzzy petiole”.
However this begs another question. I can’t seem to find the actual scientific name for “fuzzy petiole”. Every search I do it lists it as nangaritense. So this is still confusing. If these are two different species then the left one “fuzzy petiole” which is the one I have, should have its own scientific name should it not? I’m a stickler for taxonomy so I definitely want to know what’s going on here. Lol. Thanks so much again for the great video!
I believe that it is still an undescribed species, so it doesn't have a taxonomic name unfortunately. Similar to el choco red before it became rubrijuvenile
A US big box store (home improvement shop) chain, The Home Depot, probably the largest of its kind, is now selling Philodendron 'Fuzzy Petiole' as P. nangaritense on the website. It will increase the confusion. I have both. the nangaritense looks similar to the Philodendron lynamii. The Fuzzy Petiole looks similar to the rubrocinctum platinum.
Yeah i see fuzzy petiole being sold as nagaritense a LOT! Also see a lot of care videos for Nangaritense where the plant is in fact fuzzy petiole so that’s why i thought this might be a good video to make. DI know the lynamii is probably more similar but there doesn’t seem to be as much confusion about that plant
@@sutchplants3226 I find the Fuzzy Petiole to be similar in some ways to P rubrocinctum. Now the Fuzzy Petiole is readily available in the USA, but it does not look to sell much among the general public. It seems more tolerant of low humidity of general apartments (I am in NY where half of the year the relative humidity is in the low 20s%
Yes its the same here, in our winter months humidity drops way down to between 10 or 20% but my fuzzy petiole has done really well even at those humidity levels
hang on, at 5:19 you said nangaritense and at 5:45 it's nangaritense too. I'm guessing 5:19 is the fuzzy petiole?
You’re absolutely right… I hadn’t noticed that mistake, yes the first plant at 5:19 is the fuzzy petiole, good catch!
@Sutch Plants thank you for this video, it clarified alot of confusion when I was looking at the 2 plants
Could anyone who grows Fuzzy Petiole give me an opinion as to its origin please? I'm an amateur philodendron breeder. Thanks
It is a tropical plant from Ecuador.
its leaves are velvet?
No, neither plant has velvet leaves