SKU: 94088331279
golden pothos characteristics

golden pothos characteristics Pothos, Golden

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Description

golden pothos characteristics Pothos, GoldenGolden Pothos (Epipremnum aureum)Golden Pothos is a beloved, easy care houseplant known for its trailing vines and heart shaped, green and gold variegated leaves. Though not native to North America, it has earned its place in homes and indoor garden spaces due to its resilience, air purifying qualities, and adaptability to various light conditions. In tropical and subtropical climates, it can also be grown outdoors as a lush ground cover or climbing

Golden Pothos (Epipremnum aureum)
Golden Pothos is a beloved, easy-care houseplant known for its trailing vines and heart-shaped, green-and-gold variegated leaves. Though not native to North America, it has earned its place in homes and indoor garden spaces due to its resilience, air-purifying qualities, and adaptability to various light conditions. In tropical and subtropical climates, it can also be grown outdoors as a lush ground cover or climbing vine.

Key Characteristics

  • Air Purification & Indoor Use
    Golden Pothos is one of the top houseplants for removing indoor air toxins, including formaldehyde, benzene, and carbon monoxide, making it an excellent plant for improving air quality in homes and offices. Its trailing vines can be trained to climb walls, trellises, or cascading from hanging baskets.

  • Extremely Low-Maintenance
    This plant thrives in low to bright indirect light, tolerates occasional neglect, and only needs watering when the top inch of soil feels dry. It's a great starter plant for new gardeners or a set-it-and-forget-it choice for busy households.

  • Tropical Accent for Outdoor Landscapes (Zones 10-12)
    In frost-free regions, Golden Pothos can be grown outdoors as a lush groundcover, wall climber, or even to cover trellises or fences, where it brings a tropical, exotic vibe to the garden. Its rapid growth helps cover bare areas quickly.

  • Vining Growth Supports Vertical Layers
    Pothos naturally climbs trees or support structures, making it a useful element for adding vertical layers to an herbaceous or understory planting scheme in a tropical food forest or permaculture-inspired patio garden.

  • Toxicity Awareness
    While it's a beautiful and beneficial houseplant, Golden Pothos is toxic to pets and humans if ingested, due to calcium oxalate crystals. It should be kept out of reach of children and animals.

Product Details

  • Native Range: Solomon Islands (Western Pacific)
  • Plant Life Cycle: Perennial (evergreen in warm climates or indoors)
  • Sun Requirements: Part shade/part sun
  • Soil Requirements: Medium
  • Mature Height: Vines up to 10-40 ft in ideal outdoor/tropical conditions; 6-10 ft indoors with support
  • Bloom Time: March-July (rare in cultivation)
  • Bloom Color: White to green spathe (rare in cultivation)
  • USDA Hardiness Zones: 10-12 (outdoor); widely grown as a houseplant in all zones

Golden Pothos is an excellent choice for both beginners and experienced gardeners. Whether used indoors to clean the air and decorate shelves, or outdoors in warm climates to bring dense greenery to vertical spaces, this plant delivers beauty with ease.

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SKU: 94088331279

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4.4 ★★★★★
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patricia
Draper, US
★★★★★ 5
buenos
Size: 5 Quarts
Siempre compro de este aceite y es buenisimo me gusta
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Reviewed in the United States on May 5, 2026
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E. K. Byham
New York, US
★★★★★ 5
An essential work in putting American history in perspective
Format: Hardcover
This is a great book. It is not a book for everyone, however. If you don't know the difference between the Pilgrims and the Puritans, and I don't mean just when they arrived, try something simpler. It is a fascinating read if you already have some knowledge. For example, had I not been familiar with Hudson River geography and history, I'm not sure I would have been able to follow Bailyn's account of New Netherland. Naturally, as in any history, the most interesting stories are those you haven't heard before. For me, that was the information about New Sweden; I even read that section first. What makes Bailyn's book great, however, is his ability to make one see material one already knows a great deal about in new ways. Although he never addressed this question per se, he helped me answer a question that has been on my mind for at least fifteen years, and on which I've done considerable research - why did the Puritans, who arrived in 1630 as staunch Presbyterians, deriding their Separatist/Congregationalist Pilgrim neighbors, declare themselves Congregationalists in 1648 in the Cambridge Platform? (In part, the answer Bailyn helped me surmise is simply that when two or three Puritans gathered together, they had at least four different theological positions. It was hard enough to reconcile them in a single congregation; a presbytery would have been impossible.) The book also caused me to reassess my whole viewpoint on early Connecticut, and I certainly came to appreciate the importance of John Winthrop, Jr. beyond his role there. It is amazing too that Bailyn covers such a wide range of issues while devoting relatively few pages to each. The review in The New York Times Book Review, at least as I recall it, was wrong. While that reviewer praised the Virginia, Maryland and New Sweden/New Netherland portions, the New England portion (about 40% of the book) was dismissed as being only of interest to genealogists. While it is true that the earlier sections were more reflective of the book's subtitle, "The Conflict of Civilizations," the New England section would be of interest to a rather small portion of the genealogical community. (For example, I learned nothing new about my only ancestor discussed in the book, William Vassall.) I doubt if that reviewer has ever seen an on-line genealogy, which frequently contain claims such as that so and so was born in 1585 in the United States. As I have already said, the New England section, like the rest of the book, does a marvelous job of putting information in perspective; something that anyone interested in history needs to do.
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Reviewed in the United States on July 10, 2013
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LPThomas
Louisville, US
★★★★★ 4
Interesting and important book
Format: Hardcover
This book looks at the motivations and demographics of the first wave of English immigrants to flee to what was to become the USA. Interestingly written, it explores the educations, positions of and the relationships of the earliest settlers to our east coast. I read it while researching our Family Tree and finding the people connected before coming, and for generations after. The endless Indian wars were a revelation, as was the tale of the oppressed becoming the oppressors as Quaker families fled Massachusetts for New Netherlands.
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Reviewed in the United States on March 9, 2013
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RobCargill
Louisville, US
★★★★★ 5
The Barbarous Years: The Peopling of British North America: The Conflict of... Bernard Bailyn
Format: Hardcover
A remarkable book!!! I have never read such a comprehensive book on early United States history that contained so much information I had never read before. How the status of "indentured servant" existed alongside the origins of slavery in Virginia and Maryland (along the Chesapeake Bay) was both remarkable and horrible. That a white man (typically, landowner) could have a child with a (black) slave who would become a free person at adulthood (earliest laws) created problems (they needed the "help"), so this law of the 1650s-1660s was changed! And if a white (free) woman had a child with a (black) slave, the resulting child would remain a slave! Matrilineal or patrilineal human rights, that is the question. Indentured servant, but with no expiration date. I had never before read how people in this country were real "pioneers" in the creation of slavery - at least with slavery of humans captured from the continent of Africa! It seems that whatever voices of "Christian" decency there might have been at the time - church based values or ones simply based in the hearts of people living here - they were drowned out by commercial interests or those who simply couldn't be bothered by such concerns. I hope you read this book and recommend it to your friends! Sincerely, Bob Cargill, Minneapolis
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Reviewed in the United States on April 19, 2013
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k
Charlottesville, US
★★★★★ 3
A decent primer -- no more.
Format: Hardcover
This is an odd book for one of America's premier historians. It isn't a bad book -- a person of Bailyn's erudition couldn't write a bad book -- but it doesn't hang together well. The author does not really have anything new to say and a historian of the Early Colonial Period will quickly recognize the usual sources. It is hard to see exactly what historiographical niche this book fills. Even the title is misleading. Sure, Jamestown was barbarous enough by our standards and New Amsterdam was plenty harsh. But, the Bay Colony was, by the rough-and-ready standards of 17th century Europe, pretty civilized. (Compare it with the contemporaneous English Civil War or the Thirty Years War.) As for "Conflict of Civilizations," there was certainly enough of that but the most interesting part of the book, the last third or so on the Bay Colony, is largely an account of Puritan theological quarrels. In fact, one senses that Bailyn felt like he was "home" when he wrote about the Bay Colony. He has, after all, written about New England since 1955 ("Merchants.") He gives the reader a clear account of the theological duels between Winthrop, Cotton, Hooker, Williams, Hutchinson and others. But, others have done this as well or better. Bailyn all but ties himself in a knot to be politically correct toward the Native Americans. For every Indian atrocity he finds a matching atrocity in European civilization. Still, if captured in war one was likely to be a lot better off among the English, French or Dutch than the Pequods. A LOT better off! This volume is part of a series that explores the settling of North America and hardly anyone is better equipped for this than the author. But, what begins as a good account of the horrors of Jamestown drifts into a twice-told tale of the niceties of Puritan disputation. It is almost as if Bailyn got bored half-way through and started channeling Perry Miller. A good book in its way and quite useful for an upper division course or first-year graduate seminar. But, not well-written enough to snare the casual reader and not original enough to snare the professional historian. An odd number.
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Reviewed in the United States on February 19, 2013

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