SKU: 21981498944
hawaiian dracaena michiko

hawaiian dracaena michiko Hawaiian Sunshine Dracaena

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Description

hawaiian dracaena michiko 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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SKU: 21981498944

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Rex Kramer
Whiting, US
★★★★★ 3
Looks decent but is slightly under engineered
Size: 41 Inch Extra Long, Color: White Faux Marble, Size: 41 Inch Extra Long, Color: White Faux Marble
Five stars for packaging, quality of materials and instructions. It's a really good looking product out of the box. No scratches or defects in workmanship. Material fit and finish is very good. If you've ever assembled anything from Ikea, the hardware will seem familiar. The problems that led to me giving it 3 stars occur in the engineering. All of the weight transfer to the center with just four corner anchor points creates a sag. If you drop a 4' level across the top after installing, it's a noticeable 1/8" dip in the middle as gravity pulls on the unsupported center. If you're one of those people that notices an out of level picture on a wall from fifty paces, this is going to be a problem for you. Being that I knew it would only get worse with time and eventually make me insane, I installed a very small L bracket in the middle under the bottom shelf, pushing the entire thing up until the deflection was gone. I also tossed the anchors that came with it as those are for concrete/block walls and used metal EZ anchors that are rated for drywall. If you use the included anchors in 1/2“ drywall, there's a good chance they'll pull out. Toggle bolts would also be a good alternative. Another small detail that's missing is the lack of a plug or cover for the four exposed cams making up the vertical center support. Depending on your viewing angle and how much stuff you'll store will determine if these are visible or not. Including a simple white decal would have been reasonable. I used some white, stick-on melamine screw covers I had lying around to try and hide the cam locks better. Lastly, I wish this were made in plain white. While the faux marble somewhat matches our dining table, The veining is too pronounced. Plain white would have been better.
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Reviewed in the United States on January 26, 2025
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G. E. Johnson
Whiting, US
★★★★★ 5
At last the ESV Expository Commentary is complete
Format: Hardcover
Finally the ESV Expository Commentary 12 volume set is complete. This series is a great resource for those who teach or preach from any translation of the Protestant canon. This is a huge book, filled with valuable insights about Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus and Numbers. It’s essential for anyone interested in the Protestant understanding of the first four books of Torah.
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Reviewed in the United States on October 8, 2025
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Lauren Barksdale -The Everyday Edit
Louisville, US
★★★★★ 5
Want to grow in your knowledge of the Bible? Then buy this book.
Format: Hardcover
If you wouldn’t dig into God’s word and go deep and learn more and more about the Bible, then this is your buy. It is so in depth that my goal of reading through the Bible in six months had to be pushed back because the information was so amazing and so in depth that I didn’t have time to read all each day and stay on my timeline
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Reviewed in the United States on July 15, 2025
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Matthew Bennett
Lowell, US
★★★★★ 5
A Great Resource for Pastors
Format: Hardcover
While I have appreciated resources like this in the past, I will admit that I was not expecting to be as impressed as I was. This volume is significant in size (over 1300 pages of content) and the depth of scholarship in the passages I consulted thus far has been surprising and refreshing for an expositor’s type of commentary. While this is not a technical commentary by design, the authors are clearly in command of their field and bring the impact of their technical knowledge to bear on the way that they discuss the topics at hand. For instance, Jay Sklar, whose work I have deeply appreciated in his more technical work - including other commentaries on Leviticus - is the author of the Exodus section. His discussion of the ransom idea introduced in Exodus 21 is clearly influenced by the deep theological and textual work he has done elsewhere, yet the prose is imminently accessible and readable to the lay reader. So too does Christine Palmer present the Leviticus chapter. The treatment of Leviticus 16-17 is masterful and quite clear - with the sole exception that the distinction and connection between atonement as forgiveness and as cleansing could be more pronounced rather than assumed. Finally, the biblical-theological sensitivity of Iain Duguid’s Genesis chapter stands out with his treatment of Genesis 2:15 and the nuance of the Hebrew words ‘abad and shamar which have priestly connotations of worshipful obedience is very important and well done. Without being overly technical Duguid presents the reader with this important nuance to the human purpose in the garden and beyond. I am very pleased with this commentary’s content and look forward to other volumes as well. I highly recommend this as a helpful expositor’s commentary for pastors and for those interested lay readers who want to get another layer deeper in their Bible reading and development of biblical-theological sensitivities.
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Reviewed in the United States on September 3, 2025
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Patrick S.
Charlottesville, US
★★★★★ 5
The first shall be last, literally, here
Format: Hardcover, Format: Hardcover
It's funny that this is the last book to complete the set, but it's also the first volume. This Pentateuch set offers a great commentary set for those looking for something more than a study Bible, but something less than a full, highly technical, original language, word-by-word study. This review will be a higher-level one rather than a review per volume. Each book of the Bible has its own author, but the layout is the same, with an overview of the book, a section outline, then a section with commentary. The typeface of this is perfect. It's big enough to be easily read and spaced out to not get lost per line. The footnotes are exactly where they need to be, at the bottom of the page but not so overencumbered that you get lost in the footnotes rather than in the main text. The books from page 1 to the last page sit open perfectly without ruining the binding or spine. There's no need to grab two other commentaries just to read and take notes from. That's impressive for these volumes in and of themselves! The division for each combination of books makes sense and also helps if you're studying genre (like 1 & 2 Timothy with Titus, or the Pentateuch). Editors Iain M. Duguid, James M. Hamilton Jr., and Jay Sklar sometimes take over a commentary section but they've picked from some good authors. Their purpose of what they're looking for in the authors are stated in each book. Being broadly Reformed and conservative while being globally minded and not overly exhaustive again points to the well-ordered nature of this set. The Hebrew is transliterated, which again points to this set being inclusive to a wider audience to approach it while still being helpful and a great source of teaching. For the price point, I think purchasing this is useful, especially as a family used commentary set from teens on up.
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