SKU: 75767558511
hawaiian dracaena indoor plant

hawaiian dracaena indoor plant Hawaiian Sunshine Dracaena

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Description

hawaiian dracaena indoor plant Hawaiian Sunshine DracaenaDracaena fragrans 'Hawaiian Sunshine' Dracaena fragrans 'Hawaiian Sunshine' is a striped corn plant cultivar with glossy dark green leaves marked by lighter green central striping. The leaves are long, sword shaped, and carried on upright canes, giving the plant a tall, tidy outline in a narrow footprint. The lime green centre runs down the length of each leaf, while the darker outer bands frame the blade. In a larger pot with several canes, the

Dracaena fragrans 'Hawaiian Sunshine'

Dracaena fragrans 'Hawaiian Sunshine' is a striped corn plant cultivar with glossy dark green leaves marked by lighter green central striping. The leaves are long, sword-shaped, and carried on upright canes, giving the plant a tall, tidy outline in a narrow footprint.

The lime-green centre runs down the length of each leaf, while the darker outer bands frame the blade. In a larger pot with several canes, the different stem heights create a layered indoor tree shape.

Fresh green striping and upright stems

  • Foliage pattern: Glossy green leaves with lighter green striping through the centre.
  • Growth form: Upright cane growth with leaves clustered at the growing points.
  • Room fit: Adds height in a narrow shape, especially as the canes mature.
  • Care needs: Warmth, drainage and measured watering keep the cane and root zone firm.

Layered canes and glossy leaf heads

'Hawaiian Sunshine' follows the Dracaena fragrans pattern of woody stems topped by rosettes of leaves. As the plant matures, the cane becomes more visible below the foliage, especially when older lower leaves are removed. This is part of normal cane development and gradually gives the plant a taller indoor tree shape.

Warm conditions, free drainage and measured moisture keep the cane and root zone firmer. The leaves are firm and waxy enough for average indoor air, but the tips can still react to salt build-up, hard water or extended dryness.

Care for striped Dracaena canes

  • Position: Bright filtered light keeps the central striping clean. Keep the leaves out of direct midday sun through glass.
  • Moisture check: Let the upper 40–50% of the pot dry before watering. Larger cane plants can stay moist deep in the pot, so check below the surface.
  • Root aeration: Choose a well-aerated potting mix that drains evenly. Add mineral components if the mix stays wet for several days.
  • Warmth: Keep the plant in stable warmth, preferably above 18 °C. Cold floors and drafty entrances can stress the roots in winter.
  • Dry indoor air: Average household humidity is normally fine. Tip burn is more often a watering or water-quality issue than a demand for constant high humidity.
  • Feeding: Use a diluted balanced fertiliser during active growth. Skip feeding when the plant is not pushing new leaves.
  • Balance: Turn the pot occasionally so the canes stay even and the leaf clusters do not lean strongly toward one side.
  • Height control: Remove old leaves when they yellow. Tall canes can be cut back during active growth if a shorter branching point is wanted.

Reading stress signs on 'Hawaiian Sunshine'

  • Crisp tips: Check tap water quality, fertiliser build-up, dry periods, and low humidity near radiators. Flush the pot if salts have accumulated.
  • Pale dry marks: These often come from direct sun. Move the plant farther from the window or filter the light.
  • Flat striping: Very low light can make the whole plant look duller. Increase filtered light gradually.
  • Drooping leaves with wet soil: Inspect the roots and cane base. Wet wilt can look like underwatering, but the solution is better drainage and a drier root zone.
  • Mealybugs in leaf bases: Look into the striped leaf clusters, especially where leaves overlap tightly.

Leaf safety for floor placement

Pets can become unwell after chewing Dracaena fragrans foliage, so place 'Hawaiian Sunshine' where cats and dogs cannot pull down or nibble the leaves. This matters especially with taller floor plants.

Fragrant species name, bright cultivar name

Dracaena refers to the dragon-tree lineage, with the name rooted in the idea of a female dragon. The epithet fragrans points to the fragrant flowers of mature Dracaena fragrans, although indoor plants are grown mainly for foliage and do not flower reliably. 'Hawaiian Sunshine' has bright green striping that runs through the foliage.

Dracaena fragrans 'Hawaiian Sunshine' has glossy dark green leaves, lime-green central striping and upright canes that form a tiered indoor tree shape.

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This book was one of several college informaion books I checked out from our local library. This one was the best - informative, objective and not-too-lengthy or not-too-short for each important element of college selection and application processes. So, I decided to buy one to keep at home. I wish the paper is thicker and better quality. Whenever I use highlighter, it got through its back-page.
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I've been working in College Student Affairs for almost 10 years (admissions & academic advising.) I bought this as a gift for my godson, who was a sophomore in high school at the time. I chose this book because it didn't put pressure on kids to pick the big name school with the highest price tag they were accepted to. It gave good advice bout finding out and figuring out what schools would be a good "fit" for them. It also had some good advice about taking & prepping for the SATs - which made it a good choice fod my godson even though he is a couple years away from filling out his applications!
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Lexington, US
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Superb book that eased my parental anxieties and has proven very helpful to my college-applicant daughter. Even though it was published in 2011, it is *not* dated (something I worried about). Sure, it will probably need an update by 2020 or so, but most of the info is not very time-sensitive to begin with.
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Louisville, US
★★★★★ 3
Good place to start
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I am an independent college adviser based in California and I recommend this book to my clients but only at the very beginning of the process (mostly to the parents of rising high school freshmen and sophomores). This book is a good place to start especially for many of the foreign educated or immigrant families, who are new to the US College Admission process. The parents do tell us that the book loses its effectiveness once they gain knowledge of the process and/or they begin working one-on-one with an independent and/or become more conscious about meeting the high school counselors early in the process. I personally like the fact that once this book is overviewed by the families, we can spend more time addressing specific concerns and giving more customized advice. As a result we only need quarterly meetings and these meetings are extremely targeted. The problem with this book though is it reads like a huge information session by colleges. Those of you who have attended some of the information sessions will know what I mean. The insights provided by the deans and admission officers of various colleges sound somewhat like a "sales pitch" at times and at other times are misleading. I also recommend my students to keep their knowledge up to date by referring to various free resources such as Nancy Griesemer's educational articles in Washington Examiner Online, or the Choice Blog. I spend considerable time volunteering my services at a high school in a mixed/low income neighborhoods; I wish the price had been more reasonable considering that this is a basic book. Lastly as members of NACAC (National Association of College Admission Counseling), all of us in the admissions field (College Admission Officers, High School Counselors, and Independent Counselors) subscribe to certain codes of ethics and one of the Statements of Good Practice says this about Fairness and Equity: We believe our members have a responsibility to treat one another and students in a fundamentally fair and equitable manner. Unfortunately, Ms. Mamlet and Ms. VanDeVelde do a great disservice by being disrespectful to a large community of Independent College Advisers, many of whom are needed when the high school counselors are juggling with case loads of 200-300 students each and are unable to keep up with the changing scene of college admissions (either due to the lack of funding or time). Gone are the days when people went to some "quack-independents" who promised admissions to Ivy Leagues--sure there are some of those but if families are careful in their research, they will soon find out that these Independents do not belong to any authentic professional organizations such as the NACAC, HECA or IECA. Most students who come to the authentic professionals are motivated to find their right fit college, explore their own strengths and weaknesses and find the best match for their talents, interests and financial situation. Most independents offer services that are reasonably priced. If Ms. Mamlet and VanDeVelde show more commitment to researching folks on the other side of the spectrum, I am sure that their book will be more enlightening.
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Reviewed in the United States on August 18, 2013
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Whiting, US
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Best College Info Book Ever!
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I have read dozens of college-related books in the past 4 years, and this one ranks the highest by far. Written by industry experts and the authors got a lot of top talent to contribute. Full of real-life advice and useful information that is actually true (I fact-checked this against some other info). I read parts of it out loud to my junior on the plane en route to a college tour, and she actually listened! Humor is always appreciated, and these authors use it without going overboard. Great information, well-presented. A must-read!
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