monstera adansonii albo care Monstera adansonii Variegata
SKU: 5880431815
monstera adansonii albo care

monstera adansonii albo care Monstera adansonii Variegata

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Description

monstera adansonii albo care Monstera adansonii VariegataMonstera adansonii variegata Monstera adansonii variegata has the slim perforated leaves of the Swiss cheese vine, with irregular cream, white or pale green markings across the foliage. Some leaves may be softly marbled, while others show stronger pale sections or a greener balance. The pattern belongs to the vines growth, so each new leaf can look different. This plant is still Monstera adansonii in structure: a node forming climber with aerial roots

Monstera adansonii variegata

Monstera adansonii variegata has the slim perforated leaves of the Swiss cheese vine, with irregular cream, white or pale green markings across the foliage. Some leaves may be softly marbled, while others show stronger pale sections or a greener balance. The pattern belongs to the vine’s growth, so each new leaf can look different.

This plant is still Monstera adansonii in structure: a node-forming climber with aerial roots and flexible stems. The variegated tissue makes the plant more sensitive than the green form, especially when leaves carry large pale sections. New leaves depend on active nodes, warm roots and enough green tissue on the vine.

Monstera adansonii variegata key features

  • Pattern: Cream, white or pale green variegation on naturally perforated leaves.
  • Growth: Climbing or trailing vine with nodes and aerial roots along the stem.
  • Leaf variation: Each leaf can show a different balance of green and pale tissue.
  • Leaf type: Variegated Swiss cheese vine with the narrow adansonii leaf shape and flexible indoor growth.

Variegated Swiss cheese vine growth

Monstera adansonii is native across tropical America and grows in warm, wet forest conditions. Indoors, the vine needs filtered light, an airy potting mix and a root zone that dries without staying saturated. A support guides the stem upward and keeps lengthening vines from tangling around the pot.

The pale parts of a variegated leaf contain less chlorophyll than the green parts. That makes high-variegation growth slower and more prone to browning from sun, dry roots, low humidity or fertiliser salts.

How to care for Monstera adansonii variegata

  • Light: Give bright indirect light. The green tissue needs light for growth, while pale tissue needs protection from harsh direct sun.
  • Watering: Water once roughly half of the pot depth has dried. Avoid keeping the root ball constantly wet.
  • Substrate: Use a chunky aroid mix with bark, coco chips and pumice or perlite for oxygen around the roots.
  • Temperature: Keep warm, ideally 18–27 °C. Cold, wet conditions can trigger yellowing and root decline.
  • Humidity: Moderate to higher humidity helps delicate new leaves unfurl with fewer dry marks.
  • Support: Train the vine loosely onto a textured pole or trellis so aerial roots can attach as the stem grows.
  • Fertilising: Use a weak feed on actively extending stems and rinse the mix if pale tissue starts browning from salts.
  • Cuttings: Propagate from stem sections with a node and viable growth point. Keep some green tissue on cuttings where possible.
  • Repotting: Step up only one pot size once roots net the mix; variegated vines are less likely to sit wet in a container that dries predictably.

Common variegated Monstera adansonii problems

  • Brown pale patches: Check direct sun, dry roots, low humidity and fertiliser build-up. Pale tissue usually marks before green tissue.
  • Soft yellow leaves: Check the lower root ball for slow drying. Heavy, wet substrate is a common trigger.
  • Weak new growth: Review warmth, root condition and green leaf area before feeding more heavily.
  • Long stretched stems: Move the plant closer to bright indirect light and add support if internodes are lengthening.
  • Distorted leaves: Inspect new growth and nodes for thrips or mites, then isolate and treat early.

Pet and child safety

Monstera adansonii variegata is irritating if chewed or swallowed. Its tissues contain insoluble calcium oxalate crystals that can affect the mouth, throat and digestive tract. Keep leaves, stems and propagation pieces away from pets and children.

Botanical name and variegation background

Monstera adansonii Schott is an accepted tropical American species in Araceae. The genus name Monstera refers to unusual leaf forms in the group, while adansonii honours Michel Adanson.

Monstera adansonii variegata produces perforated green-and-cream leaves from node-forming vines with airy roots and enough green leaf area.

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SKU: 5880431815

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Joan Phraner
Alexandria, US
★★★★★ 5
ADHD symptoms explain our behavior, BUT they do not EXCUSE it!
Format: Paperback
I read this to my 6 year old to help reinforce his own personal awareness with topics that he struggles with or to help prevent a struggle due to his ADHD. Being aware of what we need to work on is the first step to making changes and hopefully by doing this we can prevent our children from future frustrations and disappointments within themselves. It is easier to mold them into respectful, responsible children at a younger age than it will be to break bad habits later on in life. With that said this book is one of many that we read as our "self help" kinda books. Every night I choose 1 book to add to the mix of his own book choices, depending on what I am trying to make him aware of and teach him coping skills in regards to things he struggled with that day or week. I hope this list is helpful. I know I always LOVE finding someone’s review that lists more great books on these kind of topics as I am always looking for more resources! This is a list of a few of my personal favorites age range about 4-8 Helping kids about making good choices: • That Rule Doesn't Apply to Me! (Responsible Me!) • But It's Not My Fault! (Responsible Me!) • What Were You Thinking? Learning to Control Your Impulses (Executive Function) • My Mouth Is a Volcano! (talking over/interrupting people) • What If Everybody Did That? (environmental awareness) • LarryBoy and the Foolish Fig from Faraway (making good choices when friends aren’t) • The Berenstain Bears Show Some Respect (talking nice to others) • The Berenstain Bears and the Trouble with Chores • Squirmy Wormy: How I Learned to Help Myself (more autism focused) • God, I Need to Talk to You about…. Series (very short and to the point! from child’s point of view) Lying, Bad Manners, Whining, Laziness, Sharing, Stealing, My Bad Temper, Paying Attention, Hurting Others, Disrespect, Greed, vandalism, bad words, being a bad sport, video games, bullying, cheating, homework, healthy eating. Helping kids handle their anger: • Mad Isn't Bad: A Child's Book about Anger (Elf-Help Books for Kids) • I Just Don't Like the Sound of No! My Story About Accepting No for an Answer and Disagreeing the Right Way! (Best Me I Can Be) (WE LOVE THIS BOOK!!!!) • Angry Octopus: An Anger Management Story Helping Kids keep themselves safe: In all reality we aren’t always around to keep our kids safe, but we can give them the tools they need to handle themselves if a situation arises. • A Little Book About Safety (teaches kids exactly what to do in case they get lost) (WE LOVE THIS BOOK!! Perfect for 3-5yr olds, special needs children, ALL CHILDREN) Please read these books before reading them to your child ensure they are age/maturity level appropriate. I chose just a few pages here or there when my son was 4 as a preventative measure. • An Exceptional Children's Guide to Touch: Teaching Social and Physical Boundaries to Kids (Good book to help discuss a difficult topic! I have passed this book around to many friends! Awareness is key to Prevention) • I Said No! A kid-to-kid guide to keeping your private parts private • My Body Belongs to Me Helping kids Learn about God and teaching good Morals to live by (VeggieTales) • Every Day with God: 365 Daily Devos for Boys • Growing Day by Day: 365 Daily Devos for Boys Helping Kids learn responsibility with money: • Junior's Adventures: the Boxed Set • The Berenstain Bears' Dollars and Sense • Financial Peace Junior Parent books: I have read over 30 books and these are the ones I liked • Raising Boys With ADHD: Secrets for Parenting Healthy, Happy Sons (LOVE this book, great resources. I have been using it for 3 years now. It is categorized by age and the challenges that come with that age) • Parenting Children with ADHD: 10 Lessons That Medicine Cannot Teach (APA Lifetools) • Smart Money Smart Kids: Raising the Next Generation to Win with Money • Driven to distraction • The strong willed child • Parenting isn’t for cowards (I just started reading but seem good so far)
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Reviewed in the United States on March 10, 2017
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gayle h. swift
Lake Worth, US
★★★★★ 5
Good Reminders to Parents & Kids, e.g., Identifying Something as "Funny" Does Not Make It Less Hurtful
Format: Paperback
What Were You Thinking? by Bryan Smith and illustrated by Lisa M. Griffin addresses common moments from a child’s life. As many parents and teachers can vouch, the answer to the title question is frequently that the child wasn’t thinking at all; they operated on impulse. Or, they were thinking but their behavior was highly unlikely to produce their expected result. This book helps kids see that doing the first thing that comes to mind may not be their best choice. It might even accomplish the opposite of their intended goal. It also shows how kids sometimes expect something to be funny when it can actually cause others–classmates, teachers, coaches and parents– to be annoyed instead of entertained. Sometimes the “cost” of the laughter they seek, far exceeds the momentary rush of any attention. The illustrations invite exploration of the book’s theme and make obvious that Braden’s idea of funny does not necessarily match his classmates” feelings. This can lead to conversations about the range of responses one can see within an entire classroom of kids. What Were You Thinking? outlines a simple four step strategy which kids can practice to help them smooth out their responses and ensure that the result they get is the one which they want. A brief Tips for Parents and Educators is included which offers further information on how to guide children to develop better impulse control. Can also open conversation about intentions & how humor doesn’t lessen the pain of hurtful remarks/behavior. AQ Lens: Kids who have experienced trauma, grief and or loss may have weak impulse control, high distractibility. Or they may have been taught negative and/or inadequate behavior strategies. In addition to learning better strategies, these kids may also have to unlearn negative strategies. This book offers another tool for helping kids fine-tune their emotional literacy and expand their menu of choices. By exploring the gap between intended goal and actual results, families can teach kids to recognize and choose strategies that serves them better. --Gayle H. Swift, ABC, Adoption & Me: A Multicultural Picture Book"
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on July 12, 2016
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Lynn
San Leandro, US
★★★★★ 5
Son's behavior changed immediately!
Format: Paperback
Our 4-yr-old son was not following directions at school. His teacher had come back from maternity leave and he had gotten into some bad habits while she was gone. After reading this book he memorized all the steps and repeats them multiple times a day. It's only been one week but he has been a different child entirely -- an angel! We had been talking to him for 9 months about "making good choices" but had never qualified that a good choice was one that makes the situation better (and a bad choice one that makes the situation worse). Apparently that was key! I'm not surprised that this was written by an educator who probably saw a lot of success by clarifying this distinction with his students. I'm sure my son's amazing behavior won't last forever, but it's great to simply know that he has it in him to control his impulses. We are going to make little print-outs of the 4 steps to let him have them at school and share these tips with his teacher so she can prompt him with the same language. Great, great book!
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Reviewed in the United States on March 16, 2019
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lisa b.
Waukegan, US
★★★★★ 4
Helpful for learning impulse control
Format: Paperback, Format: Paperback
This book helped to remind my grandson to use the four steps to work on becoming an "impulse expert".
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Reviewed in the United States on April 20, 2026
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Nana
Charlottesville, US
★★★★★ 5
Every kid needs to know what’s in this book!
Format: Paperback
I ordered this for my grandson, it’s a fabulous book! It really made him think and he wanted me to laminate the teachers rules!
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on March 15, 2026

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