SKU: 95835225849
string of nickels succulent

string of nickels succulent Dischidia nummularia | String of Nickels

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Description

string of nickels succulent Dischidia nummularia | String of NickelsDischidia nummularia Often called String of Nickels, Dischidia nummularia forms slender trailing stems with thick, rounded leaves. The leaf blades are typically around 615 mm long, with a fleshy surface and pale peltate scales on the underside. Stems can climb by adventitious roots or hang in fine strands from a basket or mount, or trail from the edge of a raised planter. The shallow root run and small leaf size make watering interval, pot scale and

Dischidia nummularia

Often called String of Nickels, Dischidia nummularia forms slender trailing stems with thick, rounded leaves. The leaf blades are typically around 6–15 mm long, with a fleshy surface and pale peltate scales on the underside.

Stems can climb by adventitious roots or hang in fine strands from a basket or mount, or trail from the edge of a raised planter. The shallow root run and small leaf size make watering interval, pot scale and substrate structure especially important in cultivation.

String of Nickels foliage

  • Very thick rounded leaves, usually around 6–15 mm long, with pale scaling beneath
  • Fine trailing stems associated with the common name String of Nickels
  • Epiphytic or lithophytic growth with roots from the nodes
  • Shallow pots, hanging baskets, mounts and ventilated terrariums fit its fine root system
  • Close-set rounded leaves on fine pendant strands

Asian-Pacific range and shallow roots

Dischidia nummularia is native from southern China through tropical Asia to northern Queensland. In wet tropical habitats it grows on trees and rocks, anchoring into bark crevices, mossy surfaces, and small pockets of organic matter.

Indoors, the plant usually forms a soft cascade with fine, pendant strands. Regular trimming can create more branching near the crown, while a shallow container keeps the fine roots in a faster-drying zone.

Dischidia nummularia care

  • Light: Place in bright indirect light. Small leaves mark easily near hot glass, so use a bright position with softened direct sun.
  • Watering: Moisten the mix thoroughly, then wait until the upper half approaches dryness. Hanging baskets can dry quickly around the outer strands.
  • Pot scale: Use a shallow pot with drainage. A compact root space keeps fine roots in a faster-drying layer after watering.
  • Substrate: Choose fine-grade bark, perlite, coco chips, and a little sphagnum. The mix stays open after repeated watering.
  • Humidity: Humid, ventilated conditions reduce crisping on new strands and let moisture clear from dense trailing growth.
  • Temperature: Maintain 18–28 °C, especially after watering during cooler months.
  • Feeding: Use light fertiliser while stems are extending. Flush the pot if mineral crust appears on the mix.
  • Propagation: Root 5–8 cm stem sections with several nodes in a warm, humid container with airflow.

String of Nickels strand checks

  • Wrinkled leaves: Check pot weight and root condition. Dry roots and stressed fine roots can both leave the foliage soft.
  • Yellow translucent leaves: Review moisture level, root temperature and substrate age. Refresh the mix and improve drying speed.
  • Sparse strands: Increase filtered light and trim the longest vines to encourage branching closer to the pot.
  • White crust on the mix: Flush with clean water and reduce fertiliser strength.

String of Nickels cut stems

Cut stems and leaves of Dischidia nummularia can release a milky exudate. Trail the strands from a basket or mount away from frequent handling, and rinse hands after pruning or preparing cuttings.

Coin-leaf name origin

Robert Brown published Dischidia nummularia in 1810, and it is accepted in Apocynaceae. Nummularia means coin-like, matching the rounded nickel-shaped leaves; the genus name refers to a two-part floral corona structure.

Dischidia nummularia trails from shallow baskets with fine stems and rounded coin-like leaves.

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KAB
Chelsea, US
★★★★★ 5
Great Read!!! Great story!!!
Format: Kindle
The series is long, but Ms. Wolfhart does a fantastic job of weaving this tale while bringing so much to the characters. Surprises and plot twists along the way to keep you intrigued. There is some graphic sex, but is no way the focal point. Grammar was excellent (a rare find with a lot of self publishers) with only a few noted errors. I rarely give 4 stars, let alone 5.
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Reviewed in the United States on April 30, 2021
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Elisa
Port Orchard, US
★★★★★ 3
Sadly, DNF
Format: Kindle
I read this thru KU. I LOVED the synopsis. And then I began reading... and it was a DNF at 68% after picking it up and putting it down several times because I really loved the main female character. *****SPOILERS***** Pros: The world is unique, intriguing and fun. The primary female character is bad-a** but not a b*tech or a mary sue. The primary female has depth. I really want to know what happens to her even tho it's been weeks and I don't remember her name. The villains to the point I read are pretty good -- an ever present threat of mysterious and possibly many culprits. Cons: Way, way too many points of view. I stopped counting at 7. It's the prime reason why I don't care about most of the characters or remember their names even when I like them. There's just too many points of view so almost none of the characters have enough book space for the author to properly develop them. This literally killed the book for me. Actually it killed my desire to read. For weeks. The main male is more villain than hero. He agreed to marry the main female then locks her up & eschews her for her sister, all while bad mouthing her as unfit to rule when he never spent any time with her getting to know her. He is actually unfit to rule as he is blind to the woes of his own kingdom and starts off a peace mission to secure a ceasefire through marriage by murdering an inn full of people in her country for no real reason. Plus, he constantly makes promises he does not keep. And it's gross of him to pine for the sister behind the main female's back. ***** As much as I really wanted to see what happened to the main female character, it wasn't enough for me to keep trying to slog thru this book. There was a lot of potential here that just fell short. Hence, 3 stars.
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Reviewed in the United States on June 19, 2021
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MaryBeth K
Louisville, US
★★★★★ 5
Fae Courts with High Intrigue
Format: Kindle
This book is one that just builds and builds and then surprises you to no end. You may think you know the villains and then you are jolted in another direction. Princess Reyna is a real gem, strong of character, a fierce fighter, and loyal to her family and kingdom. Just when you think she and Lorcan, well you know, the plot is flipped. Can't wait to see where this goes in book two.
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Reviewed in the United States on July 7, 2023
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Kindle Customer Maureen
Port Orchard, US
★★★★★ 4
Slow, sorry but good
Format: Kindle
This was a slow moving book. Lots of character pov chapters, lots of superfluous descriptions and endless courtly appearances stalled this book to start. Once you get into the heart of the story, it takes off. Before you know it the book is done. My favorite character is Reyna. She is so strong. She is true to herself. She gets into a lot of trouble with her headstrong ways but it's entertaining. I have high hopes for Lorcan. He is honorable to a fault. Thane had turned out to be better than I thought but i still don't like him. Eislin is useless. Great plot twists at the end. I'm looking forward too book 2.
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Reviewed in the United States on June 6, 2020
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Faifre6
Los Angeles, US
★★★★★ 5
Very detailed! Beautiful world building! Strong Heroine!
Format: Kindle
Starts off a little slow and confusing with different POV’s, but starts to all come together towards the middle to make an elaborate plot line and makes it all worth it. Beautiful world building and attention to detail as well as great writing. The cliffhanger was gut wrenching! Can’t wait for the next book!
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Reviewed in the United States on March 4, 2020

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