SKU: 13909794442
philodendron height and spread

philodendron height and spread Philodendron grandipes – Foliage Factory

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Description

philodendron height and spread Philodendron grandipes – Foliage FactoryPhilodendron grandipes Philodendron grandipes is a Central and South American Philodendron with long petioles and broad green, cordate blades. Leaves can arch outward or hang slightly on long petioles, creating an open plant with a wider outline than the pot may suggest. This species ranges from southeastern Nicaragua to Ecuador and grows in wet tropical regions as a scrambling epiphyte. In a pot, the long petioles carry the leaves outward, shift the

Philodendron grandipes

Philodendron grandipes is a Central and South American Philodendron with long petioles and broad green, cordate blades. Leaves can arch outward or hang slightly on long petioles, creating an open plant with a wider outline than the pot may suggest.

This species ranges from southeastern Nicaragua to Ecuador and grows in wet tropical regions as a scrambling epiphyte. In a pot, the long petioles carry the leaves outward, shift the plant’s balance and make stable potting important as the plant matures.

Philodendron grandipes long petioles and leaves

  • Leaf shape: Broad, cordate green blades sit on long petioles and widen the plant’s outline.
  • Petioles: Long, slender petioles can arch outward or hang slightly as leaves mature.
  • Growth habit: The species is described as a scrambling epiphyte in wet forest.
  • Indoor size: Mature plants can become wide, so pot balance matters as the leaves lengthen.

How Philodendron grandipes uses space

Philodendron grandipes has elongated petioles and broad blades. The petioles can carry the leaves in an arching or outward direction, so the plant often needs more horizontal space than its pot diameter suggests.

Warmth, moderate to high humidity and a moist but airy root zone suit its wet-forest growth. A dense, soggy mix can hold too much water around the roots, while a very dry setup can lead to weak leaf expansion and crisping edges.

Care for Philodendron grandipes petiole growth

  • Pot stability: Use a stable container as the long petioles can shift the plant’s balance.
  • Light: Use bright indirect light to keep petioles sturdy and leaves well sized.
  • Watering: Water after the upper 25–35% of the pot has dried, then empty any standing water.
  • Humidity: Moderate to high humidity helps broad leaves open evenly and reduces edge stress.
  • Substrate: Choose a chunky, moisture-retentive aroid mix with bark, perlite and a light organic component.
  • Temperature: Keep at 18–28 °C and avoid cold root conditions.
  • Repotting: Repot when roots fill the pot or the plant becomes difficult to water evenly.
  • Feeding: Feed lightly during active growth with a balanced fertiliser, especially while new leaves are expanding.
  • Propagation: Propagate from stem sections with at least one viable node; single leaves without a node will not produce a new plant.
  • Pruning: Remove damaged leaves close to the base and trim only node-bearing stems if size control is needed.
  • Semi-hydroponics: Can adapt to mineral substrates such as pon, pumice, lava or LECA if the root zone stays evenly moist and well aerated.
  • Growth rate: Usually moderate indoors, with wider growth developing as the root system and petioles mature.

Philodendron grandipes petiole and leaf issues

  • Leaning growth: Rotate the pot gradually and check whether the plant is reaching strongly toward the light.
  • Yellow leaves: Inspect the root zone for staying wet too long in dense substrate.
  • Crisp margins: Check humidity, watering rhythm and heat from nearby radiators or strong sun.
  • Thin, stretched petioles: Increase indirect light and make sure the plant is not crowded by taller foliage.
  • Pests: Check petioles, leaf undersides and new growth for spider mites, thrips, mealybugs or scale.

Pet safety for Philodendron grandipes

Philodendron grandipes is toxic if eaten. The plant contains calcium oxalate crystals that can irritate the mouth, so keep it out of reach of pets that chew plants.

Philodendron grandipes etymology and species background

The genus name Philodendron comes from Greek roots meaning tree-loving. Philodendron grandipes was described by Kurt Krause and published in Engler’s Pflanzenreich in 1913. The epithet grandipes combines Latin roots for large and foot.

Order Philodendron grandipes for long petioles, broad green leaves and an open shape that becomes more pronounced with maturity.

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Vivian Davis
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★★★★★ 5
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Color: 8-in-1 Silver, Size: Rechargeable
My hands can no longer open a bottle of wine. This makes it so easy.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 29, 2026
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Diane D
Draper, US
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Best electric corkscrew - by far
I have tried others but this electric corkscrew outshines them all....so far. Really like it. I have been disappointed with some before though if you get a very dry cork that splinters.....but this one has a much smoother operation and just works better. Good price too.
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Reviewed in the United States on April 14, 2026
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RSj
Lexington, US
★★★★★ 5
It is light weight, rechargeable and it works hands-free.
This wine bottle opener is well designed and well constructed. It comes with a foil cutter and works hands-free when you push the button. It pulls up the cork - and then pushes it back out to discard the cork. It is rechargeable!! It is replacing an older opener that left behind cork fragments in the wine - and ate AA batteries quickly.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 30, 2026
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DME
Belleville, US
★★★★★ 5
Best on the market!
I have tried three other brands of electric cork pullers. The fact that I now invested in a fourth probably telegraphs what this review is all about: this Vinabon device is great, hands down winner in the electric cork puller sweepstakes! First, its motor is more powerful. Some winemakers are employing corks that fit pretty tightly, and the other brands I used would occasionally be unable to remove the cork. The screw would simply stop turning, without ay way of resuming. Advantage: the bottle. Second, it is small, about half the size of the others, leaving a small footprint on the counter. Third, it lasts much longer on a single charge. It doesn't sit in a cradle, because it doesn't need to. Assuming you open 10 to 20 bottles a week, you will be able to go two weeks without needing to plug the charging cable in, and a full charge does not take long. 4 vertical lights on the cylinder tell you how much of a charge remains. Fourth, you simply press and release the start button and maintain gentle pressure on the bottle while the device descends into the cork and removes it. As soon as you remove the device from the bottle, it immediately begins to eject the cork. All with that one touch of the button! Fifth, if you encounter a particularly tight cork, the device will stop, whereupon you push the button again and it continues. A couple of synthetic corks required me to restart 3 for 4 times, but it ultimately conquered them all! That leaves only one issue: a failed cork that breaks during the removal process, because the screw cannot engage the cork enough to remove it without it breaking. To my knowledge, the only solutions to this, with any cork puller, are to resort to an Ah So, or if that cannot do it, just shove the cork down into the bottle, and drink the entire bottle in one evening. Truth to tell, I have, myself, actually enjoyed that latter remedial step, especially with a larger format bottle on an evening when I am dining alone. I cannot yet report on the ultimate problem that seems to vex all electric cork pullers I have owned: If the cork disintegrates within the cylinder during removal, how do you get the remains out? I threw my last cork puller away because I could not remove the cork detritus stuck in the cylinder, rendering the device useless thereafter. If there is a solution to that, I would not be surprised to find that this unit already handles the problem. If BMW were to ever make an electric cork puller, I expect it would be much like this one. t costs almost twice as much as the others I have owned, but you get what you pay for. After all, you can buy a small fleet of Yugo's for the price of a BMW. Bravo, Vinabon! I
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