SKU: 42416276517
lemon lime pothos vs neon

lemon lime pothos vs neon Epipremnum 'Neon'

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Description

lemon lime pothos vs neon Epipremnum 'Neon'Epipremnum aureum 'Neon' ('Neon Pothos', 'Golden Pothos') Epipremnum aureum 'Neon' is a bright chartreuse pothos with glossy heart shaped leaves and flexible vining stems. New leaves often emerge in a vivid yellow green tone before settling into a clearer lime green colour across the vine. This cultivar has the same climbing aroid structure as Epipremnum aureum: nodes, aerial roots, and long stems that can trail from a pot or climb when given support.

Epipremnum aureum 'Neon' ('Neon Pothos', 'Golden Pothos')

Epipremnum aureum 'Neon' is a bright chartreuse pothos with glossy heart-shaped leaves and flexible vining stems. New leaves often emerge in a vivid yellow-green tone before settling into a clearer lime-green colour across the vine.

This cultivar has the same climbing aroid structure as Epipremnum aureum: nodes, aerial roots, and long stems that can trail from a pot or climb when given support. Indoors it usually keeps juvenile leaves, with an even, smooth leaf surface and solid chartreuse foliage.

As a selection of Epipremnum aureum, it belongs to a wet-tropical climbing species from Mo‘orea in the Society Islands, where aerial roots anchor the stems to humid forest surfaces.

Chartreuse pothos features

  • Solid chartreuse to lime-green foliage with glossy heart-shaped leaves.
  • Trailing or climbing vine growth from node-based stems.
  • Fresh yellow-green new leaves that mature to a brighter green tone.
  • Easy shaping through pruning and rooting stem cuttings.
  • Warmth and bright indirect light help reduce stretched growth on the vine.

Bright leaves on a self-clinging vine

'Neon' is an evergreen self-clinging climber, with slender stems that can lengthen strongly if left unpruned. The leaves are oval to heart-shaped at the base and stay glossy in indoor culture. When grown on a support, the aerial roots can attach and the plant may produce larger leaves as the stems mature.

Yellowing, dullness, stretched stems, or soft growth usually point to changes in moisture, light, temperature, or root health. Regular pruning keeps the vine fuller and prevents long bare sections from forming.

Care for clear lime-green growth

  • Light: Give bright indirect light to reduce stretched vine growth. Gentle morning or late-day sun may be tolerated after acclimation.
  • Water: Water when the upper 20–30% of the mix has dried. The plant grows strongly in warm months, but the roots still need air between waterings.
  • Substrate: Use a loose aroid mix with bark, perlite, coco chips, or pumice. Good drainage keeps the root system active and reduces soft-stem risk.
  • Temperature: Keep between 18–28 °C. Protect from cold draughts and cold wet windowsills in winter.
  • Humidity: Average indoor humidity is usually fine. Higher humidity helps new leaves expand more smoothly on climbing stems.
  • Feeding: Feed lightly during active growth. Strong new vine extension responds better to regular low doses than occasional heavy feeding.
  • Pruning and propagation: Cut above a node to shape the vine. Root healthy stem cuttings in water or a light propagation mix before potting them on.

Colour, stem, and root checks

  • Dull or stretched growth: Move gradually into brighter indirect light and prune long sections to encourage fresh shoots.
  • Yellow leaves with wet soil: Check drainage, pot size, and root condition. Let the mix dry further before watering again.
  • Brown edges: Review watering gaps, dry heat, fertiliser concentration, and direct sun exposure.
  • Soft lower stems: Inspect the base and roots for rot. Remove affected sections and reroot healthy vine tips if needed.
  • Sticky residue or speckling: Check for scale, mealybugs, thrips, or mites along stems and leaf undersides.

Safety for this bright pothos

Epipremnum aureum 'Neon' contains insoluble calcium oxalate crystals. It is toxic if chewed by pets and can irritate the mouth, lips, tongue, and throat, so keep leaves and cuttings out of reach.

Botanical name and cultivar name

Epipremnum comes from Greek roots meaning “upon” and “trunk.” Aureum means “golden,” referring to the yellow-gold markings of the classic plant.

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SKU: 42416276517

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4.0 ★★★★★
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J
Verified Purchase
J.M. Northup
Chelsea, US
★★★★★ 4
A Philosophical Take I Didn't Expect
Format: Kindle
I heard of this book for decades. It appeared to me a fundamental piece of literature for the UFO community, which stirred my interest. Why? I needed to know what made it special. Reading this title, I discovered a philosophical view I hadn't anticipated. The author was abducted multiple times, and his family appears to have been involved. He's researched indepthly and communicated with other abductees, yet he maintains objectivity. That's particularly rare in our modern times - refreshing even. I loved what Whitley said about the visitors possibly being the first quantum experience. Before he wrote it, I said to author Sahara Foley how cool it was that Whitley implied the abduction was like bringing something into existence. I even likened it to quantum physics, stating something is both real and unreal until it it brought into existence. I'm not sure I completely buy what the author is selling, but I can agree that the visitors are more than they seem. Whatever is happening should not be ridiculed or ignored. That benefits no one and stifles true research along with healing. I think Whitley has great ideas, which should be considered - everything should be considered at this point, especially as we've found a possible link to quantum physics. I recommend this book if you are curious about anything unknown. Beyond UFOs and abductions, the message of communion is good. The historical information, the need to support people struggling with something traumatic, and the possible causes of these phenomenonal experiences are well presented. This is a great book of commentary on the human condition.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on November 30, 2024
F
Verified Purchase
Fred Fanning
Louisville, US
★★★★★ 5
Fascinating Book
Format: Audiobook
This incredible book tells the story of people's experiences being abducted by Aliens. It includes information from many abductees, not just the author's. I have never read a book like this, and although I don't know about aliens, I believe these people experienced something horrific. Their experiences must be investigated. Bravo to the author for sharing his experiences with his readers.
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Reviewed in the United States on February 1, 2025
D
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Dr. Know
Bozeman, US
★★★★★ 3
I had heard of this book when it made a splash in 1987, I did not have time then...
Format: Paperback
I did not have time to read this book when it came out because I was a young father, and I was at the beginning of my professional career. Now, almost 40 years later, I am a grandfather and I within months of the end of my professional career. So I made time to read it, finally. What instigated me to do so now, is all the recent activities concerning UAPs and the unexplained sightings of UAPs in the night skies over military bases in New Jersey and, also, in England. Put simply, I was in the mood to give this book a chance. The "story" starts strong with Whitley Strieber's descriptions of his apparent contact with the "visitors." He is a talented fiction writer and that comes through, but after the first 60 or so pages, the story drags and becomes increasingly repetitive, and hard to read. The penultimate chapter may have read well in 1987, with its buzziness, and the power of three....but in 2025 it doesn't. It just sounds so out-of-date like an Oldsmobile Cutlass with a T-top. (Yes that was a real car...Google it.) Then, there are chapters that are nothing more than transcripts of what Whitley, and his late wife, Anne, had said while in sessions under hypnosis; they are barely understandable, let alone readable. The allusions to quantum mechanics later in the book adon't fit very well, and seem to be an afterthought and are very hard to take. Clearly, Streiber's ideas are not grounded in the science, but in a kind of typical layman's misunderstanding of quantum mechanical "concepts." That is there is an extension of the theory into things it is not meant to explain, and proves that having a little knowledge about something is dangerous. All-in-all, I suffered through the "last," 229 pages (including two appendices), but I can say I have read it from cover to cover. What is my opinion of the abduction story? I hate to be unkind, but it seems more like the memory of a hallucination, or of a very bad and graphic dream, than something that actually happened. It seems to be the product of a fertile and creative mind of a talented author. Yes, there are other people who also claim to have been abducted, and there are some commonalities among their claims, and I know that their numbers should add credibility to their stories, and I know it is unkind to doubt them, but I do and I remain skeptical. So did Whitley Streiber write this book knowing full well that is was actual a work of fiction while claiming it was non-fiction, or did he write it honestly thinking that he was sharing objective truths? On this, it is very hard to know...it is plausible that he really believes these things happened to him, and that he wrote about them sincerely. The author himself seems never to be sure. His lie detector results seem to indicate that he is telling something that he truly believes, but one never knows for sure. To sum up, I am glad the book is no longer a mystery to me. My curiosity was satisfied and that is enough for me, but it took work.
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Reviewed in the United States on February 8, 2025
S
Verified Purchase
Steve D.
Belleville, US
★★★★★ 5
Read this book to begin your study!
Format: Kindle
If you can read only one book on UFO abductions, read this one! This book is amazing and will give you a very good idea about what these UFO abductees are experiencing. This is the book that launched me on an ongoing UFO study which has led to my obtaining and reading tons of books on UFO and abductions. While not an abductee myself and, in fact, I have arguably never even seen a UFO, I know that there is something to this phenomenon that we do not understand. The interest seen in the public square now and the government's greater focus on the UFO phenomena leads one to conclude that what is happening is real and unknown. While I personally believe that the UFO phenomena is a spiritual one involving the unseen spirit world, that is just one of the many theories out there. Read this book and embark on a fascinating journey for yourself.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 14, 2022
L
Verified Purchase
lynn sweeney
Charlottesville, US
★★★★★ 5
Loved the book
Format: Paperback
Awesome book. Great reading
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on November 19, 2025

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