anthurium crystallinum adalah Anthurium crystallinum 'Crystal Hope' – Iridescent Veins Hybrid
SKU: 40693465109
anthurium crystallinum adalah

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

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Description

anthurium crystallinum adalah 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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SKU: 40693465109

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Verified Purchase
L. Moyse
Pawtucket, US
★★★★★ 5
A fine performance
Format: Paperback
You see an old pocket knife on the cover, maybe a Case; it may have even belonged to Jesse Graves, but he has certainly used it in sculpting his poetry. "Tennessee Landscape" is pure plain speech, and all the more evocative for it. Graves uses language not to shock, not incite and not to transgress; he uses it to bring home simple and time worn truths that never go away. In the poem that is the book's title, Graves recounts his family history and ends telling us "The dead move through us at their will, their voices chime/just beyond our hearing...alone in the field, and never alone." He pays homage to a farming tool"(Elegy for a Hay Rake), not with a tone of jaundiced cynicism, speaking to it instead in a voice filled with thanks and appreciation, as if the hay rake, too,knew how worthwhile its job had been. The second part of the volume expands Graves' geography from East Tennessee to New Orleans, North Carolina, points beyond, and the cast of subjects becomes a little broader as well, but the language remains firm and precise. "The Night Cafe: North Rendon, New Orleans": diction so perfect I feel I was there that night too. "My Sister at Sea": likely my favorite here. It feels personal, a short glimpse into a private heart; the glimpse is snatched away in a hurry but not before Graves tells us "...wishing I could bring/ you to this shore...Make your illness a small boat we could burn/Sailing out in ashes on the current." Whether it is a landscape, a hay rake, a bar or a loved one, Jesse Graves is a poet of things that last, one who writes quiet confessions with confidence in a spare quiet and sure voice. Very highly recommend this book.
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Reviewed in the United States on February 24, 2013
T
Thomas A. Holmes
Chelsea, US
★★★★★ 5
Fine Contemporary Poetry--Just Happens to Be Appalachian
Format: Paperback
The poems in Jesse Graves' TENNESSEE LANDSCAPE WITH BLIGHTED PINE express an indebtedness to a way of life that we contemporary Appalachians have watched transform at an accelerated pace over the past few decades, as we see the beloved old ways of our culture adapt to the demands of a society marked with the pervasiveness of media, the incursion of corporate demands, and the poignant recognition that as much as family prepares us to face the world outside our community, the impact of that world can blur the impressions our homes have made on us. Graves' work approaches these themes from various directions, as a son looking to the legacy of his family, as a youth and young man balancing education--both formal and that gleaned from personal experience--and as a family man weighing what he shares and offers in embodying those values. In this consistently fine volume, it is difficult to select favorites, but there are "River Gods," where an inebriated student and his companion cross the high railway trestle over the Tennessee River in Knoxville, Tennessee, "Deep Corner," where the speaker contemplates how his life has turned out differently than his brother's, "Mother's Milk," where the speaker weighs how much his mother has contributed to his life (including, sweetly, "an ear for slightly off-pitch singing"), and "Digging the Pond," where the speaker and his father silently acknowledge that the son will not preserve all his father's values: . . . I stood off to the side too often to learn what he was born knowing. The doing and the undoing. I can find in his face what he reads about the future in the tea-colored water, his eyes and mine trying to avoid it. Graves' love for these gifts, those accepted and those only acknowledged, resonates throughout TENNESSEE LANDSCAPE WITH BLIGHTED PINE. Graves' appreciation for lyric poetry, his talent for finding the expressiveness of everyday language, and his offering scenes with great depth of meaning and feeling make this collection memorable, worthy of high recommendation.
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Reviewed in the United States on December 30, 2011
J
jwriter
Natrona Heights, US
★★★★★ 5
Extraordinary Journey
Format: Paperback
Jesse Graves conducts the reader on an intimate journey from childhood to manhood. Rooted deep in the rich red clay of East Tennessee, the narrative provides fresh insights about the ties of land and family. "Johnson's Ground" describes an annual homecoming at the family cemetery: "they never let us go, even the ones/Laid under before our births continue to make their claims." The poems express both nostalgia for the past as well as forward-looking hopes for a fresh life in the future. Daughter, Chloe often becomes a bridge from present to past as in "Water Washing Away": "A fair price for the vision of a girl/ who has warped the ancient spell of time,/ who has turned back my eyes." Tennessee Landscape with Blighted Pine is an enchanting read for poet and non-poet alike.
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Reviewed in the United States on February 10, 2013
A
Verified Purchase
Austin Duck
Massapequa, US
★★★★★ 1
Go Read Art Smith or Charles Wright
Format: Paperback
This book is clearly the case of someone steeped in a lyric tradition, but, rather than engaging in the self-reflexive structure of the tradition, is interested in describing ad nauseum, his southern experience. While there are moments in the book that tend toward the sublime, it rests largely as self-indulgent in a way antithetical to the form it chooses.
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Reviewed in the United States on November 5, 2013
A
Angels Among Us
Dallas, US
★★★★★ 5
Dr. G.
Format: Paperback
Jesse Graves (a.k.a. "Dr. G.") is one of my professors at East Tennessee State University. Not only is he a great teacher, he is a very talented poet. I would recommend his work to anyone! Anyone that does not like his work probably just failed his class. :p
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Reviewed in the United States on August 25, 2014

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