SKU: 78804352924
indoor plant that looks like bamboo

indoor plant that looks like bamboo Bamboo Palm

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Description

indoor plant that looks like bamboo Bamboo PalmGraceful Fronds and Bamboo Like Canes The Bamboo Palm is a classic indoor palm featuring multiple slender, cane like stems that mimic the appearance of clumping bamboo, topped with soft, feathery, deep green fronds. Each stem is ringed with nodes, giving it that unmistakable bamboo texture while still clearly resembling a palm, which makes it a favorite for creating an instant tropical feel in living rooms, lobbies, and home offices. The overall

Graceful Fronds and Bamboo-Like Canes

The Bamboo Palm is a classic indoor palm featuring multiple slender, cane-like stems that mimic the appearance of clumping bamboo, topped with soft, feathery, deep-green fronds. Each stem is ringed with nodes, giving it that unmistakable “bamboo” texture while still clearly resembling a palm, which makes it a favorite for creating an instant tropical feel in living rooms, lobbies, and home offices. The overall effect is lush and airy rather than stiff—graceful arching leaves that filter light and soften the edges of your space.

Clumping, Vertical, and Room-Filling

Chamaedorea seifrizii grows as a clumping palm, sending up multiple slender trunks from the base that gradually form a dense, multi-stemmed thicket. Indoors, Bamboo Palm typically matures around 5–7 feet tall and 3–5 feet wide in a large pot, making it an excellent floor plant for adding height and soft screening without feeling bulky or overbearing. Outdoors in truly frost-free climates or in conservatories, plants can grow taller, but as a houseplant, you can expect a moderately paced, manageable growth rate that rewards you with more fronds each year rather than sudden, unmanageable size jumps.

Indirect Light, Even Moisture, and Humidity

The Bamboo Palm is naturally adapted to the understory of Central American rainforests, so it thrives in low to medium indirect light and handles the softer light of most homes and offices well. It will tolerate brighter conditions, but harsh direct sun—primarily through glass—can scorch the delicate leaflets, so think bright, filtered light near a window, not full-on blazing exposure. Give it a rich, well-draining potting mix and keep the soil evenly moist, watering when the top inch feels dry; this palm appreciates consistent moisture but resents sitting in waterlogged soil.

Because it comes from humid forests, Bamboo Palm enjoys higher humidity and steady indoor temperatures typically between about 65–80°F. It will tolerate average household humidity, but lightly misting the foliage, grouping it with other tropical plants, or using a small humidifier helps prevent the tips from browning in very dry air. With this combination of gentle light, evenly moist but draining soil, and reasonable humidity, your palm will steadily produce new canes and fronds that keep it lush and full.

Pet-Safe, Air-Purifying Focal Point

Indoors, Bamboo Palm acts like a living green room divider or backdrop, softening corners, anchoring seating areas, and adding vertical interest behind sofas and chairs. It’s widely recognized as one of the palms included in NASA’s classic clean-air research. It is often recommended for improving perceived indoor air quality by filtering common VOCs, which makes it especially appealing in bedrooms, home offices, and shared living spaces. Additionally, the Bamboo Palm is considered non-toxic to both pets and humans, providing a lush, dramatic presence that’s also friendly to cats, dogs, and children.

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SKU: 78804352924

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4.6 ★★★★★
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Gary M. Buyachek
Phoenix, US
★★★★★ 4
Textbook
Format: Paperback
There was plenty of work put into this book and a lot of research. The reason why I did not give the fifth star is due to the reading of the book. To me I felt like I was back in school reading a textbook which after a time became tedious. It started to get to the point of reading too fast just to get the pages to go by. I probably missed some information as I found the book boring at times. The advice that I would give somebody is to read the book slowly and not to read too many pages and then put it down to pick it up another day. This way you can absorb the information better.
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Reviewed in the United States on March 3, 2026
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DennyC
Bozeman, US
★★★★★ 5
The Unalterable Truth
Format: Paperback
The publisher's description of this book claims that there would be a severe reaction within American society due to the facts Professor Stannard brought to light. There was, unfortunately yet not unexpectedly, not much of a response to the horrifying truths revealed in his compelling narrative on the fate of the Western Hemisphere's indigenous people. Most Americans simply do not seem to care whether their nation's history, from the moment Columbus set foot in "The New World" and claimed that the people he encountered would make good slaves to the immediate present, is bathed in copious amounts of indigenous people's blood. The European's behavior when they were unleashed upon the unsuspecting Native Americans reveals not only their homicidal nature and destructive approach to a relatively pristine world; but their unfathomably horrid and continuous attempts to keep the destruction and death going. Extermination was the name of the game and even a cursory glance at the American newspapers of the nineteenth century reveals a national psychology which leaves one in a vast and endless state of confusion and disbelief. But it's all true. The phrase, "The Final Solution" was coined by nineteenth century Americans, not Hitler's Germany. Tens of millions perished, an eternal food source, the buffalo herds, were almost rendered extinct and while all this was occurring the people of Africa were chained to their masters' bidding. The people of Iraq understand. So do the Vietnamese and now the Syrians and many, many, many more. Of course, on publication Dr. Stannard was labeled a crank for mostly revealing that American "exceptionalism" is merely a high falootin' excuse for mass death and destruction.
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Reviewed in the United States on August 27, 2017
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C Rasmussen MD, MS
Birmingham, US
★★★★★ 5
Horrifying but it is a must read
Format: Paperback
This book should be required reading for all high-school students rather than the friendly history books that treat Columbus as a hero. This man was a murderous psychopath. Strong words but after reading this powerful text you will agree. I am ashamed at what these monsters from Spain, and England and elsewhere did soon after Columbus "discovered" the Americas. And all of the sacred knowledge lost. Everything the Mayans wrote down was burned. Knowledge from prehistory--all gone. All of the knowledge from prehistory the Indians in the Amazon basin held, all of the technology on agriculture, building, medicine, sacred knowledge, and much more gone. And for what? I cannot tell you how powerful this book is. I cannot get it out of my head. If you think black lives matter well, sorry folks indigenous Indians of the New World MATTER MORE. They should be rioting for compensation from Spain and England. Oh, I forgot, nobody's left to riot. It was a complete deliberate genocide killing perhaps 80 million paleo-indians from the 15th century on. And they are still killing the rest of them in Mesoamerica and esp. the Amazon where oil and mineral companies are murdering the remainder. And nobody seems to care! Read this book and learn the truth finally.
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Reviewed in the United States on September 19, 2020
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Verified Purchase
Leric ashe
Natrona Heights, US
★★★★★ 5
In 600yrs. , life itself, is elusive
Format: Paperback
American Holocaust or books related to the Native American should be required reading. The carnage or genocide, on the inflicted erased thousands of years of culture. We have lost so much which makes us, all less. Hispaniola, had a population of 8,000,00, in 1496. By 1535 they were extinct. Equivalent to N.Y. city today. Spanish and British. One looking for gold, the latter imposing European values, to steal land. But what was most fascinating, the religious hypocrisy. To kill, enslave, torture in the name of God. Who snatches babies from their mother, and feeds them to dogs, hanging natives from a gibber, and burned alive, brand enslaved women's faces every time they are resold ? The British and Spanish were the "Very ministers of Hell".
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Reviewed in the United States on November 19, 2023
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Verified Purchase
Tameka Hanford
Phoenix, US
★★★★★ 5
Academic / Thought-Provoking
Format: Paperback
They Were Her Property: White Women as Slave Owners in the American South is a powerful, eye-opening work that challenges long-held assumptions about slavery and gender in American history. Stephanie E. Jones-Rogers thoroughly dismantles the myth that white women were passive or marginal participants in the institution of slavery. Through meticulous research and extensive use of primary sources, including legal records, letters, and testimonies from formerly enslaved people—the book reveals that many white women were active, knowledgeable, and often brutal slave owners in their own right. What makes this book especially compelling is how it centers the voices and experiences of enslaved people to expose the economic, legal, and physical power white women wielded. Jones-Rogers shows that white women not only benefited from slavery but also enforced it, defended it, and used it to build wealth and social status. The writing is clear, authoritative, and accessible, making complex historical arguments understandable without oversimplifying them. This book is an essential read for anyone studying American history, slavery, race, or gender. It forces readers to confront uncomfortable truths and rethink narratives that have long softened or excused the role of white women in slavery. They Were Her Property is both academically rigorous and deeply impactful—a necessary contribution to honest historical understanding.
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Reviewed in the United States on December 16, 2025

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