SKU: 90760183973
anthurium crystallinum flowers

anthurium crystallinum flowers Anthurium crystallinum 'Crystal Hope' – Iridescent Veins Hybrid

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Description

anthurium crystallinum flowers Anthurium crystallinum 'Crystal Hope' – Iridescent Veins HybridAnthurium crystallinum Crystal Hope Compact growth, dark velvet leaves and bright white venation define Anthurium crystallinum Crystal Hope. The leaves face outward from the crown, so the pale veins remain easy to see even while the plant stays relatively neat in a pot. The plant pairs outward facing leaves and pale venation with thick epiphytic roots that need an airy pot setup. Its crown presents the leaves outward and keeps the plant tighter than

Anthurium crystallinum ‘Crystal Hope’

Compact growth, dark velvet leaves and bright white venation define Anthurium crystallinum ‘Crystal Hope’. The leaves face outward from the crown, so the pale veins remain easy to see even while the plant stays relatively neat in a pot.

The plant pairs outward-facing leaves and pale venation with thick epiphytic roots that need an airy pot setup. Its crown presents the leaves outward and keeps the plant tighter than many large velvet Anthuriums.

Defining features of Anthurium crystallinum ‘Crystal Hope’

  • Compact habit: The cultivar stays tighter than many larger crystallinum-type plants.
  • Outward-facing leaves: The blades are held so the vein pattern is visible from the front and sides.
  • Dark green surface: Mature leaves harden to a deep green, velvety finish.
  • Crystalline white veins: Pale veins create a sharp contrast across the cordate blades.
  • Thick epiphytic roots: The root system needs oxygen around the pot rather than dense, wet soil.

Growth in a compact pot

Anthurium crystallinum ‘Crystal Hope’ forms a tidy crown with leaves that expand outward from the centre. A close-fitting pot helps the root zone dry at a sensible pace, while a chunky substrate keeps moisture moving around the thick roots.

New leaves are soft while expanding and can mark or crease if the air is very dry. Once hardened, the blade becomes darker and the vein pattern looks clearer, especially in bright filtered light.

Care for Anthurium crystallinum ‘Crystal Hope’

  • Light: Give bright indirect light. Strong direct sun can scorch velvet leaves, especially while they are still soft.
  • Water: Water evenly, then allow the upper part of the substrate to dry slightly before the next watering.
  • Substrate: Use a chunky mix with bark, coco chips, perlite and a small moisture-retentive fraction. The roots should never sit in compacted soil.
  • Humidity: Around 60–75% humidity helps the leaves expand without sticking or creasing.
  • Temperature: Keep it warm, ideally 20–27 °C, with no cold draughts around the pot.
  • Repotting: Move up only when the root system needs space. Oversized pots can stay wet too long around the lower roots.

Issues on Anthurium crystallinum ‘Crystal Hope’

  • Smaller new leaves: Often follow root disturbance, low humidity or irregular watering during leaf expansion.
  • Brown margins: Dry air, mineral build-up or repeated drying can mark the fine leaf edge.
  • Root decline: Dense, old or collapsed substrate can stay wet and reduce oxygen around the roots.
  • Speckled new growth: Inspect new leaves for thrips or mites if fresh blades open with scars or pale marks.

Safety around Anthurium crystallinum ‘Crystal Hope’

Anthurium crystallinum ‘Crystal Hope’ contains calcium oxalate crystals and should be kept away from pets and small children. Chewing the plant can irritate the mouth and throat, and sap from damaged tissue can irritate skin or eyes.

Patent and botanical background

The genus name Anthurium comes from Greek words for flower and tail, referring to the spadix. Anthurium crystallinum Linden & André was published in 1873 and is accepted as a species native from Panama to Colombia. The Latin epithet crystallinum means crystal-like or resembling crystal. ‘Crystal Hope’ was patented in 1995 and described as a controlled cross between two crystallinum breeding selections, LV-36 and LV-40, developed in Cartago, Costa Rica by Claude Hope.

Dark velvet blades stay close to the crown, with white veins held clearly across each leaf.

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I was pleased to see the new complete translation of Picatrix by Dan Attrell and David Porreca released in the Magic in History Series of Penn State Press. Picatrix is central to European astrological magic that it deserves an academic treatment. In addition, the willingness of Penn State Press to release a complete translation of Picatrix shows how things have changed in the past decade and the yeoman work done by mages such as Austin Coppock, Alexander Cummins and Cliff Low to delve deeply into astrological magic. As the translators point out at page 2 this version of Picatrix is, "specifically intended for students and scholars of the history of science and magic" In addition to the complete text of the Latin Picatrix in English translation the translators provide useful historical accounts of the pre-history of Picatrix and of the Latin text, Picatrix's exposition of the path of the sage, the use of the terminology nigromancia for astrological magic and the cosmology of Picatrix. Most interesting is a statistical breakdown of the types of magic in Picatrix. Finally, the translators elucidate their view of the importance of psychoactive drugs in ritual, though the translators insist at page 28 that they do not, "wish to suggest that all magic in the Picatrix can be explained away as drug addled delusion…" Coming as it does from an academic perspective, focused on history and social science the Attrell and Porreca translation provides a valuable orientation and background for the contemporary practitioner of astrological magic. No single translation can do justice to a work as complex as Picatrix and anyone who is serious about astrological magic or interested in Picatrix should certainly get a copy of the Attrell and Porreca translation as well as the Greer and Warnock Picatrix and the forthcoming Arabic Picatrix translation.
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