SKU: 82466426584
dieffenbachia green leaves

dieffenbachia green leaves Dieffenbachia 'Crocodile' | Textured Cane

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Description

dieffenbachia green leaves Dieffenbachia 'Crocodile' | Textured CaneDieffenbachia seguine 'Crocodile' A raised underside midrib gives Dieffenbachia 'Crocodile' a sculptural leaf surface. Broad dark green leaves carry lighter mottling and small pale speckles, while mature blades show the crested ridge that makes this cane form aroid distinctive. Growth comes from a thick cane like stem. New leaves open from the upper crown, and the lower stem becomes clearer as older foliage ages, giving the plant a stronger vertical

Dieffenbachia seguine 'Crocodile'

A raised underside midrib gives Dieffenbachia 'Crocodile' a sculptural leaf surface. Broad dark green leaves carry lighter mottling and small pale speckles, while mature blades show the crested ridge that makes this cane-form aroid distinctive.

Growth comes from a thick cane-like stem. New leaves open from the upper crown, and the lower stem becomes clearer as older foliage ages, giving the plant a stronger vertical outline in its pot.

Raised midrib and cane structure

  • Broad dark green leaves with lighter mottling and pale speckling.
  • Raised underside midrib that becomes stronger on mature foliage.
  • Upright cane-forming habit with a weighty upper crown.
  • Visible lower stem develops gradually with age.
  • Node-bearing stem sections can root after renewal pruning.

Dieffenbachia seguine growth in pots

Dieffenbachia seguine belongs to Araceae and occurs from Caribbean islands into tropical South America, where wet forest conditions favour warmth, filtered light and oxygen around the roots.

In pots, Dieffenbachia 'Crocodile' carries a broad upper crown above a thick cane. A weighty pot and airy substrate keep the lower stem stable after watering.

Dieffenbachia 'Crocodile' care

  • Light: Give bright to medium indirect light for the broad blades; filtered placement protects the leaf surface at midday.
  • Water: Let the upper few centimetres of substrate dry lightly, then water deeply and drain the pot fully.
  • Substrate: Use an airy aroid-style mix with houseplant compost, fine bark, perlite, and mineral drainage material.
  • Temperature: Keep at 18–27 °C while the plant is producing new leaves, with the root ball protected from cold windowsills and draughts.
  • Humidity: Moderate to higher humidity reduces dry edging as large new leaves expand.
  • Pot stability: Choose a drainage pot with enough weight to hold the cane and broad crown upright.
  • Feeding: Apply reduced-strength fertiliser every 4–6 weeks during warm-season growth.
  • Renewal: Remove spent lower leaves cleanly; tall stems can be cut above a node and rooted in warm conditions.

Crested-leaf care signals

  • Cane base softness: Check drainage, root firmness and substrate structure around the lower stem.
  • Leaning crown: A heavy upper section may be outgrowing the pot; rotate the plant and move it into a heavier container.
  • Crisp brown edges: Review watering gaps, warm dry air, fertiliser strength, and cold exposure near glass.
  • Several yellow lower leaves: Inspect the lower roots and older substrate for ageing or collapse.
  • Sticky marks or pale stippling: Check the underside midrib, petiole bases, and leaf backs for scale, mealybugs, or spider mites.

Crocodile cane handling

Cut or bruised Dieffenbachia tissue can release sap with calcium oxalate raphides. Keep the plant away from pets and children, use gloves for cane work and rinse tools after pruning.

Crocodile leaf texture

Mature leaves can develop a raised, reptile-like underside midrib that gives the plant its textured leaf surface. Dieffenbachia seguine belongs to Araceae, the aroid family.

Dieffenbachia 'Crocodile' develops upright cane growth with a raised underside midrib on mature leaves.

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SKU: 82466426584

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zippytroll
Cuba, US
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good buy
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good buy
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Reviewed in the United States on May 31, 2026
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Roll Tide 2009
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Had water in my gas
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Made my 150 outboard quit bogging down during acceleration
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Reviewed in the United States on April 25, 2026
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J. Redding
Boise, US
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Works. . .
Color: Blue, Number of Items: 1
Left 10% ethanol gas in my 3500 watt inverter and forgot about it. After I got it started, it was suging and alsmost unusable even with fresh gas. Drained all the gas and used a measuring cup to get the fuel/additive ratio right and let the generator run wiuth a 1000 watt work light. AFter about 15 minutes, the surging stopped and engine smoothed out. Happened faster than I expected. Taught me a lesson about gas decomposition. Promised the genny I learned a lesson to use stabilizer. Easier than doing a carb rebuild.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 2, 2025
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dobs
San Leandro, US
★★★★★ 5
Tried as a last resort... It worked!
Color: Blue, Number of Items: 1
My 3.0 MerCruiser stern drive was hard starting and would not hold at idle and ran really rough under load. I put 2 cans of S*Foam Marine through the tank and replaced the fuel filter and the spark plugs. With only a slight improvement I decided to bring it to my dealer. They replaced the distributer cap, rotor and plug wires and sent me on my way. The idle was good, but under load (headway speed) it ran really rough. Brought it back and they swapped out the carburetor and lake tested it. Back at home it ran great for a one-hour ride. A week later I tried to start it and the idle was bad again (engine shaking, erratic RPM). Almost dragged it back to the dealer but thought I would try this first. Per instructions I added this to about 15 gallons already in the boat and then topped it off with 5 gallons of fresh gas. Let it idle at about 1500 RPMs for 15 minutes and WOW, it's purring like a kitten. Next time, this will be my first resort!
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Reviewed in the United States on August 6, 2024
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Gary0529
Battle Creek, US
★★★★★ 5
It works!
Size: 16 Fl Oz (Pack of 1), Style: Individual
A short story long---LOL---My zero turn started acting quirky-it would not run at full power and would begin to stall when put under a full load - like trying to mow some taller or thicker grass- never did stall since I would immediately kill the mower but obviously it was not right. I checked and changed the fuel filters-this one has 2 . One in the pick up line in the tank and one is inline just before the fuel pump unit. No help! So, before I dropped the big bucks to have the local farm dealer come and pick it up (at $75 per pickup and return) plus h=whatever shop charges that would result I thought "What the heck, lets give this stuff a try" I gambled $6 . I put in 5 ounces for the 5 gallons tank, and filled it with the gas I had on hand- should have been relatively fresh gas -no more than 2 weeks since pumped . Well, whatever the cause of the issue within about 15 to 30 minutes of low speed running- mostly at idle - the engine seemed to be idling smoothly as opposed to before where it surged but never died, I gave it a try at mowing. YEA!!!! full power and no bogging down - I finished mowing the yard and a part of the pasture (not yet grown up much so it is not requiring the rotary cutter YET) My only guess is perhaps a batch of either old gas or some water in the gas can or mower tank but whatever the cause it fixed it --and all for $6.
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Reviewed in the United States on April 12, 2025

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