SKU: 83806170888
dracaena song of india

dracaena song of india Giant Dracaena Song Of India – Dahing Plants

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Description

dracaena song of india Giant Dracaena Song Of India – Dahing PlantsSong of India (Dracaena Reflexa) Description Most Song of India plants spend years working their way up to impressive. This one already put in the time. She's here, she's tall, she's ready and there's exactly one of her. With her signature spiraling yellow edged leaves stacked on woody canes, this Dracaena Reflexa 'Song of India' delivers immediate tropical elegance. Native to the islands of the western Indian Ocean, she brings that lush, leafy green

Song of India (Dracaena Reflexa)

Description

Most Song of India plants spend years working their way up to impressive. This one already put in the time. She's here, she's tall, she's ready - and there's exactly one of her.

With her signature spiraling yellow-edged leaves stacked on woody canes, this Dracaena Reflexa 'Song of India' delivers immediate tropical elegance. Native to the islands of the western Indian Ocean, she brings that lush, leafy green vibe that transforms your room instead of just occupying a corner.

She's lower maintenance than she looks. Dracaena plant care comes down to bright indirect light, water when the top inch or two of soil feels dry, and a light feed during spring and summer.

At this size, you don’t have to wait for her to turn into the plant everyone comments on. She's a statement piece all ready to impress.

One plant. One home.

Whoever takes her home skips years of slow growth and gets straight to the good part. The part where people walk into your living room and ask, "Wait - is that real?"

She won't be here long. Book a live video call to meet her before someone else does - you can literally say “Hi!” before she arrives at your door, exactly as magnificent as she looks right now.

How much light does a Dracaena Reflexa 'Song of India' need?

She's a bright indirect light fan - think filtered sunshine near an east or north-facing window. Her signature yellow-edged variegation stays vivid in good light, but fades in dimmer spots (her way of saying she's not happy). Direct midday sun is a hard no. Crispy leaf tips are nobody's idea of a good time.

How often should you water a Dracaena Reflexa 'Song of India'?

Water when the top inch or two of soil feels dry - usually every one to two weeks depending on your home's conditions. Water thoroughly, let it drain, and never leave her sitting in a saucer of water. She has strong opinions about wet feet. In winter, back off a little and let the soil dry a bit more between waterings.

What fertilizer does a Dracaena Reflexa 'Song of India' need?

She's a light eater. A balanced liquid fertilizer at half strength, once a month during spring and summer, is plenty. Come fall, put the bottle away - she's not interested in snacks when she's resting. Always fertilize into damp soil to avoid root burn.

What temperature does a Dracaena Reflexa 'Song of India' like?

She's happiest between 65-80°F (18-27°C) and likes stability - cold drafts and heating vents are equally unwelcome. Keep her away from exterior doors in winter. Below 55°F (13°C) and she'll let you know about it.

Does a Dracaena Reflexa 'Song of India' like humidity?

She appreciates moderate humidity, which most homes provide naturally. If your air is very dry (thanks, winter heating), occasional misting or a pebble tray nearby will keep her happier. Brown leaf tips are usually her polite complaint about dry air.

How big does a Dracaena Reflexa 'Song of India' get indoors?

Indoors, she typically reaches 3-5 feet tall if grown from a seedling - though with good care and enough time, she can go taller. (This particular specimen is proof of that.) In her native tropical habitat she becomes a Dracaena tree several metres high, but your ceiling is safe.

How fast does a Dracaena Reflexa 'Song of India' grow?

Slowly. A Dracaaena plant takes her time - which is exactly why a mature specimen like this one is worth getting excited about. With this Giant Dracaena, you're skipping years of waiting and going straight to the statement piece.

Is the Dracaena Reflexa 'Song of India' pet-friendly?

She is not, unfortunately. Like all Dracaena types, she contains saponins that are toxic to cats and dogs if ingested - causing vomiting, drooling, and digestive upset. Keep her somewhere your curious pets can admire from a safe distance.

Is the Dracaena Reflexa 'Song of India' toxic to cats?

Yes - if your cat takes a nibble, expect drooling, vomiting, and possibly dilated pupils. The ASPCA lists Dracaena species as toxic to cats. She's gorgeous, but best kept out of reach of any feline who treats houseplants as a personal salad bar.

Is the Dracaena Reflexa 'Song of India' toxic to dogs?

Also yes. Symptoms in dogs include vomiting, diarrhea, drooling, and lethargy. Place her somewhere your dog can't reach - a high shelf or a room they don't have access to works well.

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Donna Menchinger
Charlottesville, US
★★★★★ 5
Five Stars
Format: Paperback
Fun
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Reviewed in the United States on January 9, 2017
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MJ
Belleville, US
★★★★★ 2
Bent
Format: Paperback
When the book came the cover was crumpled and bent so it was really hard to read
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Reviewed in the United States on January 6, 2020
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N. Durham
Fort Morgan, US
★★★★★ 5
Quite possibly the best Punisher stories ever told
Format: Hardcover
It's no secret that Garth Ennis' long run on the Punisher (particularly the MAX titles) has been nothing short of superb if not visionary, and this handsome hardcover collection, featuring three seperate one-shots, further proves that point. From First to Last begins with the Tyger, a story in which a young Frank Castle embarks on his first night of vengeance as the Punisher. As he has some mob men in his sights, he recollects to a summer in Brooklyn when he was a young man, and a shocking event that only further shaped Frank's inevitable path to becoming the Punisher. This story is good, but it's not anything really great, though John Severin's art is quite good. Thankfully, everything gets better from this point on. The Cell finds Frank turning himself in and convicted of his many murders and taken to the bowels of Riker's Island. However, Frank has a reason he's here, and it involves five men who all share a secret and a link to Frank that you'll never see coming. This story alone makes this collection worth picking up, and the art by Lewis Larosa (who also worked on the first Punisher MAX TPB, In the Beginning) is gritty, bloody, and brilliant. The third and final story is the spectacular Punisher: The End, featuring art by the legendary Richard Corben, which more than makes it worth checking out alone. As part of Marvel's "The End" line, this one-shot is just that, as an elderly Frank Castle finds himself as one of the last men on Earth after a nuclear holocaust has turned the world to ash and dust. Of course, there are still those that are guilty, and need to be punished. The last two stories alone are some of the best Punisher stories ever written, period. If you missed out on the one-shots when they were first released, now is your chance to read some of the best mainstream comic gold to come along in a long time, and this collection only furthers the notion that is discussed on the book's inside flap: Ennis was born to write the Punisher.
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Reviewed in the United States on December 30, 2006
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A.G.
Massapequa, US
★★★★★ 5
Three really solid stories here.
Art is top notch. We get three really nice stories of pre-Punisher Frank, mid-Punisher Frank and the end of Punisher Frank. I look at this book a couple times a year and Garth Ennis really did a great job on the character. The art by Severin, LaRosa and Corben were all great and fitting for their stories. Good collection if you can find it. Highly recommend.
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Reviewed in the United States on January 22, 2026
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The Critic
Dallas, US
★★★★★ 4
Vintage Castle
Garth Ennis renders one of his hectic stories with Frank Castle coming back to his origins. The first story deploys Frank's childhood and the unexpected consequences of it later on. I humbly believe the second part(The cell), is the best of this issue. It narrates the ultimate vengeance of Castle against those who took the lifes of his family, several years ago in the middle of a shooting at day light in Central Park. A mention must be done of the art in The Cell. The pencils of Lewis Larosa, the Inks & Finishes of Scott Koblish and Raúl Treviño's colors, leave nothing to desire and accomplish to portrait that classic look of Castle as a somewhat mature/old man still capable of hell when it comes to seek revenge for his family. The End, however, which puts Castle in a dystopian future of a post-nuclear bombing, fails to blend smoothly Garth Ennis' script with the caricaturesque art from Richard Corben and Lee Loughridge. There is a dissonance between this very old Frank Castle in an apocalyptic environment and the drawings that for some reason maintain a gap with previous artists. As a whole, From First to Last is totally worthy. Garth Ennis is back to team with Castle and that's all what counts. Cristián Gómez O.
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Reviewed in the United States on February 20, 2011

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