SKU: 9700142912
philodendron quail gardens

philodendron quail gardens Philodendron 69686 Rare Climbing Aroid

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Description

philodendron quail gardens Philodendron 69686 Rare Climbing AroidNative most likely to the tropical rainforests of Brazil and originally associated with the legendary Roberto Burle Marx collection, Philodendron 69686 is one of the most iconic and mysterious climbing aroids in modern cultivation. For years this plant circulated only under its collection number 69686 assigned by renowned aroid botanist Dr. Thomas Croat during research at the Missouri Botanical Garden. It has since also become associated with the

Native most likely to the tropical rainforests of Brazil and originally associated with the legendary Roberto Burle-Marx collection, Philodendron 69686 is one of the most iconic and mysterious climbing aroids in modern cultivation. For years this plant circulated only under its collection number — “69686” — assigned by renowned aroid botanist Dr. Thomas Croat during research at the Missouri Botanical Garden. It has since also become associated with the cultivar name Philodendron ‘Bette Waterbury’, honoring one of the founding figures of the International Aroid Society.

Despite decades in cultivation, the exact origin and taxonomy of Philodendron 69686 remain uncertain. Many collectors believe it represents a natural hybrid, likely involving species related to Philodendron pedatum or other deeply lobed climbing Philodendrons. Its uncertain lineage only adds to its legendary status among aroid collectors.

What immediately sets Philodendron 69686 apart is its extraordinary foliage morphology. Juvenile plants often begin with relatively simple leaves, but as the plant matures and climbs, the foliage transforms dramatically into elongated, deeply lobed leaves with an unmistakable silhouette. Mature foliage develops a striking “big ears” appearance with narrow constricted centers and spreading lateral lobes that give the plant a highly architectural and almost prehistoric aesthetic.

Unlike many Philodendrons that remain relatively static through maturity, 69686 undergoes significant morphological change as it climbs and gains size. Given proper support and humidity, mature specimens can produce truly spectacular leaves that become increasingly dramatic with each successive growth stage. This dynamic transformation is one of the major reasons the species has become so coveted within the aroid hobby.

As a member of the Araceae family, Philodendron 69686 thrives under warm, humid tropical conditions with bright filtered light and excellent airflow. In cultivation, it performs exceptionally well mounted to moss poles, tree fern totems, cork slabs, or within large tropical vivariums and greenhouse cabinets where humidity remains consistently elevated.

This is not a compact terrarium species long-term, but juvenile plants and cuttings adapt very well to humid vivarium culture during early growth stages. In larger enclosures, the plant can become an incredible climbing centerpiece as aerial roots attach aggressively to backgrounds and hardscape.

A chunky, airy substrate is highly recommended. Like many climbing Philodendrons, the roots appreciate oxygenation and do poorly in dense compacted soils. Mixes containing orchid bark, coarse perlite, tree fern fiber, coco husk, charcoal, sphagnum moss, and ABG-style components all work exceptionally well. The substrate should remain lightly moist while still allowing excellent drainage and airflow around the roots.

Bright indirect lighting encourages tighter internodal spacing and stronger foliage development. Under insufficient light, growth may become stretched and juvenile leaves may persist longer before transitioning into mature morphology.

Humidity levels between 70–100% produce the best results, particularly during active climbing growth. Consistent moisture and humidity also encourage stronger aerial root production and more dramatic leaf expansion. While adaptable once established, this plant truly excels when provided greenhouse-style tropical conditions.

For serious aroid collectors, Philodendron 69686 occupies a unique place in cultivation history — part botanical mystery, part collector legend, and part living sculpture. Few Philodendrons combine such dramatic maturity shifts, historical significance, and unmistakable foliage architecture into a single plant.

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SKU: 9700142912

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Amazon Customer
Omaha, US
★★★★★ 5
A Treasure of French Cinema at it's finest.
Long awaited and long to be treasured. What a fantastic idea to put these Truffault classics and unique packaging. I've waited decades for something like this and can't wait to start watching and loving all of them.
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Reviewed in the United States on August 4, 2025
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Tomasz, Poland
Cuba, US
★★★★★ 4
Better transfer, less content.
Transfer of this BluRay edition of Doinel's box is of course better (however, the difference is not dramatic) than in previous DVD box of the same cycle by Criterion. However, the book included has not even half of the texts from DVD edition. There is also less extra materials at discs. Thus, at some points this BluRay edition is worse than DVD's. I don't understand why Criterion made this box poorer in content than the box in poorer quality of the picture.
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Reviewed in the United States on August 1, 2025
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Klemi
Fort Morgan, US
★★★★★ 2
Great films, but quite flimsy box set
I would give it 4/5 if Criterion had made it more sturdy. It arrived in a plastic bag and was all beaten up. (Only Amazon could screw up a shipment this badly.) The short film "Les Mistons" has major gamma issues, which takes away one star.
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Reviewed in the United States on August 4, 2025
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Samantha Springs
Boise, US
★★★★★ 1
Great transfer of a classic set -- except borked Les mistons
A really nice set of one of French cinema's greatest "franchises" -- though we did not call them that back then. The tone shifts after the 400 blows of course. But it sort of makes sense, too, as things change for the character as well. But beware, Criterion failed to grade the Les mistons short film correctly. Looks a lot like HDR/SDR gamma was switched or something similar. You can see it from the opening studio logo and credits which are not the right color. Hopefully they will issue a fix. Until then you may want to wait.
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Reviewed in the United States on July 21, 2025
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Raymond Benson
Belleville, US
★★★★★ 5
Some of Truffaut's greatest works... and they're wonderful
A reviewer here called these a "waste of time" and "weird movies," giving the set 1 star. Sorry, pal, maybe critically acclaimed films by one of France's--or the world's--most important filmmakers isn't your thing. Nothing "weird" about these very accessible, realistic movies about human beings and life. Truffaut did with this series over a course of 20 years what Richard Linklater did in one movie ("Boyhood")... but between 1959 - 1979, Truffaut's attempt was more ambitious, daring, and envelope-pushing. Lead actor Jean-Pierre Leaud goes from a 14 year old to a guy in his 30s, and he's wonderful in every episode. Each film is touching, funny, dramatic, and worth seeing for anyone interested in world cinema. "The 400 Blows" is Truffaut's debut feature, and what a great one it is. It's more serious than the others in this series, and is likely the most lauded. "Antoine & Colette" is a short film made 2-3 years later. "Stolen Kisses" gets more into comedy and it's a delight. "Bed and Board" continues where the previous one left off. "Love on the Run" is decidedly the weakest but is still enjoyable. Truffaut died too young five years after that one was made. One wonders if he and Leaud might have made another entry in the late 80s or even the 90s. Great stuff.
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Reviewed in the United States on July 14, 2025

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