SKU: 5410936025
philodendron florida mint

philodendron florida mint Philodendron Florida Ghost Mint – INDONESIAPLANTS

Sale price$20.49 Regular price$22.77
Save 10%

Pay in installments of $5.69 with ShopPay, AfterPay and Klarna

Shipping Estimate
USA
  • USA
  • CAN

Ships within 48 hours · Estimated delivery Jul 22 - Jul 27

Promo Codes Available:

For Your Every Summer RSVP, with Code: SUMMER15

Description

philodendron florida mint Philodendron Florida Ghost Mint – INDONESIAPLANTSSee photos for reference to the plant features only. They are likely sent to you as featured with the descriptions below. Minimum of 4 Leaves Plants shipped will have a minimum of 4 leaves and will be rooted, not cuttings. Philodendron Florida Ghost Mint: The Unique Pale Wonder Philodendron Florida Ghost Mint is a rare, pale version of the popular Florida Ghost, known for its ethereal mint green foliage. This stunning plant adds a touch of

See photos for reference to the plant features only. They are likely sent to you as featured with the descriptions below.

Minimum of 4 Leaves

Plants shipped will have a minimum of 4 leaves and will be rooted, not cuttings.

Philodendron Florida Ghost Mint: The Unique Pale Wonder

Philodendron Florida Ghost Mint is a rare, pale version of the popular Florida Ghost, known for its ethereal mint-green foliage. This stunning plant adds a touch of sophistication and uniqueness to any indoor space. With proper care, this variety can become a prized centerpiece in your collection.

Special Characteristics of Florida Ghost Mint:

  • Minty Green Foliage: The distinctive mint-green leaves create an ethereal, almost ghostly look that adds a special touch to your plant collection.
  • Compact Growth: This plant grows relatively compact, making it ideal for those with limited space.
  • Tropical Elegance: It combines elegance with tropical charm, making it a conversation starter.

If You’re a Minimalist Stylist
You want light, lift, and clean geometry—without visual noise. Florida Ghost Mint delivers creamy-mint new leaves on an elegant, lobed silhouette that reads sculptural rather than busy. Place it in bright, diffused light and the fresh growth opens pale (mint, ivory-green, sometimes with soft lime washes) before gradually deepening across the blade with maturity. On a slim pole or flat board, internodes tighten and the outline becomes a refined column—perfect beside microcement, limewash, pale timber, or matte stone.

If You’re a Content Creator
Looking for a plant that films beautifully? The satin to semi-gloss finish throws a gentle highlight under side light, while the pale mint tones “pop” against neutral backdrops without blowing out on camera. A single leader trained upright gives you a consistent leaf plane for B-roll; rotate the planter a quarter-turn every two weeks and you’ll keep the crown centered for repeatable shots. Tip: stage one negative-space window behind the newest leaf so the lobes outline crisply at a glance.

If You’re a Small-Space Collector
You want tall impact in a compact footprint. This hybrid’s narrow stance and disciplined petioles make it a natural for shelves, desksides, and entry niches. Guide the primary stem closely to its support; let a secondary shoot arc softly to create depth without spread. Neutral planters (sand, ecru, oatmeal, charcoal) frame the mint palette; a single companion—velvety Anthurium or matte-leaf Scindapsus—adds texture contrast while keeping Florida Ghost Mint in the starring role.

If You Want Reliable Routine (Care Capsule)

  • Light: Bright, diffused daylight all day—east-window glow or a luminous zone behind sheers. Even luminance preserves minty fresh tones on new leaves and tightens spacing. Filter harsh midday sun to protect pale tissue.
  • Water: When the top 2–3 cm (≈1 in) of mix dries, water thoroughly and allow full drainage. A calm, repeatable rhythm (not constant damp) keeps margins clean and unfurls smooth.
  • Substrate: Oxygen-forward aroid blend—chunky orchid bark + coco fiber/coir + pumice/perlite, plus a modest sphagnum buffer. Air first, gentle moisture second.
  • Climate: Home-friendly band ~18–29 °C (65–85 °F) and ~50–70% RH with gentle airflow. Avoid AC blasts/heater streams directly on foliage.
  • Nutrition: Light feeding at ¼–½ strength during active months supports leaf finish and color clarity; address light quality before increasing fertilizer.
  • Training: Slim moss pole, coco totem, or a flat cedar board. Secure each node with soft ties so the stem hugs the support and the column stays gallery-clean.
  • Grooming: Dust a few blades weekly; remove spent sheaths for a polished crown. Rotate for uniform color expression around the canopy.
  • Pet note: As with many aroids, place out of nibbling reach.

If You’re Curating a Palette
Pair minty fresh leaves with warm neutrals (raw oak, rattan, travertine) for softness, or set the plant against charcoal and graphite for a high-contrast, editorial look. The pale-to-green transition across the canopy creates a natural gradient, so the vignette feels dynamic even when you keep accessories minimal.

Troubleshooting Quick Read

  • Long gaps / muted mint: Increase overall brightness (still filtered) and keep the apex in your brightest safe pocket.
  • Brown on pale areas: Often late watering or direct sun—tighten cadence, add filtering.
  • Perpetually wet mix: Increase bark/pumice fraction or step down pot size for better aeration.

Kindly reach out to us at [email protected] if you have difficulties in your purchase or have any questions.

Shipping Notes
  • Free Standard Shipping on $100+ Orders to the USA.
  • Except Preorder products are shipped in 48 hours.
  • Delivery to the USA:
  1. Standard Shipping : 3-10 business days
  • If time is of the essence, please consider selecting expedited delivery for faster service.
Exchange/Return Notes
  • We offer a 30-day return/exchange service after receiving.
  • Final sale items are not eligible for returns or exchanges.
  • To process your return/exchange, please contact us at [email protected]
  • Please click here for more details>>> Return & Exchange Policy
SKU: 5410936025

Discover Niche Categories That Outsell philodendron florida mint

Top-Converting Item to Boost Your Average Order

4.6 ★★★★★
Based on 17 reviews
Sort
Highest Rating
Newest First
Oldest First
Product Reviews
B
Verified Purchase
Brian Tarbox
Los Angeles, US
★★★★★ 4
Very accurate view of admission (I worked there); compelling read, enlightening even for people who think they already know
Format: Kindle
I was a Senior Interviewer during my senior year at Wesleyan 1981 and so I worked with many of the main characters in the book. Although the book describes a later time period it rang entirely true to me. The volume of applications...the controlled chaos...the searching for a hook or a champion for an application was very familiar. At least at Wes it seemed (and seems) that unless one's application has some unusual feature that the school is looking for that year (a particular athlete or a particular musician or a particular tough background that was overcome) the road to admission will be challenging. An area that did surprise me was the emphasis on the family of the applicant...and the degree to which an applicant was held to a higher standard if their parents were deemed to be college fluent. I guess this makes sense and actually provides a leveling of the playing field but it was surprising none the less. It may also be surprising to some that these days you don't just need to convince the gatekeepers that you could be successful at the school..you must also show how your presence would enhance the school. This is of course an enormous burden for most teenagers. Like it or not this is the reality at many "top" schools. If you or your child is applying to college you owe it to yourself to read this book....either to understand the game or to make an informed decision not to play.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on May 20, 2013
P
Verified Purchase
P. Meltzer
Pawtucket, US
★★★★★ 5
What is better? The overachieving 6 or underachieving 8?
Format: Hardcover
First, let me say that I thought that this was an excellent book and would recommend it to anyone who is at all interested in the college admissions process. Second, I was surprised at how many of the reviewers seemed shocked--shocked!--that applicants got bonus points for coming from minority backgrounds. Was this some kind of revelation? However one thing that surprised me a little bit is how--even moving beyond race entirely--the more advantages you have had in life, the more disadvantageous it will be for your admissions process. For example, I was unaware that having successful parents would be, in essence, held against you on the theory that more would be expected of you. While other reviewers have (jokingly?) said that they would advise their white kids not to check the "Caucasian" box, I might advise my (still very young) kids to say that their parents have been unemployed their whole life. I suppose that the main issue which this whole process really boils down to is the following: As a college applicant, is it more important to succeed in life relative to the world around you (i.e. relative to your classmates, to others of your race, to others of your geographical area, to your own parents' life and accomplishments, etc.) or is it more important to succeed absolutely and not on a relative scale. This book clearly informs us that the answer is the former and not the latter. Whether that should be the answer is another question. For example, say that a student's entire life could be distilled into 2 numbers each on a sliding scale from 1-10. The first number is simply your academic performance (grades, SAT's, course load, etc.) The second number is your background (race, economic circumstances, gender, etc.) In the case of Wesleyan, it seems clear to me that they would rather have a student whose first number was, say, a 6 if his or her second was a 2 (take Mig for example in Steinberg's book) than a student whose first number was an 8 if the second number was a 9 or 10 (take Tiffany Wang for example). Whether that is the right approach is certainly a legitimate issue for discusion and I'm not saying that it's not. I suppose that one of the things that would be interesting to know (even though one never really can know of course) is whether those numbers will change in the future. For example, if one were to know that Mig would always be a 6 and Tiffany would always be an 8, would that change the analysis as to which is the right approach? I suspect that part of the reason that a school like Wesleyan would favor the overachieving 6 over the underachieving 8 is due to the hope or expectation that those trends will continue in the future and that one day the 6 will actually be ahead of the 8. And maybe that's the way it works. Who knows.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on February 28, 2003
J
Verified Purchase
Jeremy W.
Phoenix, US
★★★★★ 5
You will find out how a selective private college evaluate and admit students
Format: Paperback
I'm a high school counselor and college advisor. Fifteen years ago when I started my college counseling position, I struggled to understand or explain to students and their parents how a selective private college evaluate and admit students. It was this book that helped me understand the essence of selective private college admissions. Compared to other dry theory books, this book tells the admissions practice as stories that are easy to read, understand, and associate with. I highly recommend this book to students, parents, and new counselors.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on December 5, 2024
M
Verified Purchase
M. Tucker
Dallas, US
★★★★★ 3
Who edited this mess?!?!?!?
Format: Kindle
This is a very interesting work of nonfiction. I found it intriguing and read it very quickly. I actually got invested in these students and their stories and their journey to get admitted to the college that was right for them. BUT, and this is a big but, this book is so poorly edited, it is disgraceful! If a person were reading this for research purposes, and it could be useful for just that, good luck to them. The dates are all over the place. At one point, the kids are being considered for the class of 2004, then it makes a reference to the current year as 2000, then it reverts back to 2004 for a long while, then it mentions how the kids--currently at their various chosen colleges--reacted to the events of 9/11/01. What the hell? It's very confusing. It makes it very difficult to keep things in context.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on August 8, 2013
A
Verified Purchase
Amazon Customer
Natrona Heights, US
★★★★★ 5
Abundant information but needs update
Format: Kindle
I struggled a little when try to decide how many star to give. It's an excellent book and very informative. It feels like I was not reading a college admission advisory book, which very often are dry and mechanical. It feels like reading stories of students and AOs, I got attached and involved emotionally, and really felt for them. But there were abundant information in the book, I was able to use the book to answer most my questions. If you need a list of YESs, Nos, Warnings..., then this is not the book for you. If you need to know what happens during admission process, then this is an excellent book for you. Based on the information in this book, I was able to extract my own conclusions. The reason I hesitated if I should rate this book as a five stars book is how long ago it was written. A lot has changed. Many aspects stayed same, but many aspects changed. It will be misleading if this is the only guide book you are using. Wish everyone a great college application season.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on September 12, 2015

recommand products