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philodendron burlemarx variegata

philodendron burlemarx variegata Philodendron Burle Marx Variegata – Foliage Factory

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Description

philodendron burlemarx variegata Philodendron Burle Marx Variegata – Foliage FactoryPhilodendron 'Burle Marx' variegata Philodendron 'Burle Marx' variegata is a variegated Burle Marx Philodendron with glossy green leaves broken by cream, pale yellow, or light green sectors. The pattern can appear as marbling, streaking, or larger irregular patches, so each leaf may show a different balance of green and pale tissue. The plant develops through visible stems with nodes, so it can be kept fuller through pruning or guided upward as the

Philodendron 'Burle Marx' variegata

Philodendron 'Burle Marx' variegata is a variegated Burle Marx Philodendron with glossy green leaves broken by cream, pale yellow, or light green sectors. The pattern can appear as marbling, streaking, or larger irregular patches, so each leaf may show a different balance of green and pale tissue.

The plant develops through visible stems with nodes, so it can be kept fuller through pruning or guided upward as the stems begin to extend. Its flexible stems can spread in a pot or be secured to a stake, plank, or pole as growth lengthens.

Variegated Burle Marx traits

  • Growth habit: Stem-forming Philodendron with a spreading to climbing tendency as it matures.
  • Leaf pattern: Green leaves carry cream, yellow, or pale green variegation in irregular sections.
  • Leaf shape: Glossy leaves are held on visible petioles and can build a dense pot-grown plant.
  • Stem behaviour: Stems can be pruned for fuller growth or secured upward once they begin to extend.
  • Propagation: Requires a node-bearing stem cutting; leaf-only cuttings cannot produce a full plant.

Growth, variegation and support

Philodendron 'Burle Marx' variegata grows from a visible stem with nodes. As the plant develops, those nodes can produce aerial roots and new growth points. It can stay bushier when pruned, or develop a more vertical habit when trained upward.

The variegation is irregular by nature. Some leaves may be mostly green with small pale flashes, while others may carry broader cream or yellow sections. Stems with enough green leaf area usually root and continue growing more reliably than stems producing mostly pale leaves.

Place it in bright filtered light, with the pale cream-yellow sections shielded from direct midday sun that can scorch thin variegated tissue.

Growing Philodendron 'Burle Marx' variegata indoors

  • Light: Give bright indirect light. Avoid harsh direct sun, especially on leaves with large pale sections.
  • Watering: Water when the upper part of the substrate has dried. Rehydrate the root ball fully, then let excess water drain away.
  • Substrate: Use a chunky aroid mix with bark, coco coir or chips, perlite, pumice, and a small moisture-retentive component.
  • Drainage: Keep the potting mix airy. A dense wet mix can cause root stress, yellowing leaves, and weaker stem growth.
  • Humidity: Moderate to higher humidity helps new leaves expand with fewer dry edges on pale tissue.
  • Temperature: Keep between 18–28°C. Avoid cold windowsills and wet substrate in cooler conditions.
  • Support: Add a stake, plank, or pole when stems begin to lean. Secure stems loosely near nodes.
  • Feeding: Feed lightly during active growth. Pause fertiliser if roots are damaged, leaves are yellowing, or the substrate is staying wet for too long.
  • Repotting: Repot when roots fill the pot, growth slows despite good care, or the plant dries much faster than before. Move up gradually.
  • Pruning: Prune above a healthy node to shape the plant or encourage a fuller pot. Keep enough green foliage for recovery.
  • Semi-hydroponics: Can adapt to airy mineral substrates if roots are cleaned carefully and the stem base stays above the wet zone.
  • Propagation: Use stem cuttings with at least one healthy node and some green tissue. Leaf-only cuttings will not restart into a full plant.

Common issues with Philodendron 'Burle Marx' variegata

  • Brown pale areas: Check for sun scorch, dry air, or irregular watering. Move to bright filtered light and stabilise root moisture.
  • Yellowing leaves: Check whether the lower pot is staying too wet. Improve drainage and let the upper substrate dry further.
  • Weak, mostly pale growth: Prune back to a healthy node with enough green tissue if new growth becomes too pale to continue well.
  • Long stems: Add support or prune above a node to refresh the shape. Root healthy cuttings from sections with visible nodes.
  • Distorted new leaves: Inspect for thrips, mites, scale, or mealybugs around new growth and petiole bases.

Managing variegated growth

Philodendron 'Burle Marx' variegata can produce greener leaves, finely marbled leaves, or broader cream-yellow sections as it grows. Stems with enough green tissue are more reliable for continued leaf production and propagation.

When propagating, choose a stem section with a healthy node and enough green leaf tissue to support rooting. Very pale cuttings can struggle because they have less chlorophyll available for energy production.

Pet and child safety

Keep Philodendron 'Burle Marx' variegata away from pets and children. Its tissues contain insoluble calcium oxalate crystals that can irritate the mouth, throat, digestive tract, and sensitive skin. Wash hands after pruning or handling sap.

Philodendron genus and Burle Marx name

Philodendron belongs to the Araceae family. The genus name is commonly translated as “tree-loving”, reflecting the tree-associated growth seen in many Philodendron. Philodendron burle-marxii G.M.Barroso, 1957 was named in honour of Brazilian landscape architect Roberto Burle Marx.

With steady warmth, an airy substrate and room for its stems to extend, Philodendron 'Burle Marx' variegata can mature into a full, patterned indoor plant shaped by pruning or trained upward.

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Virginia Reviewer
Los Angeles, US
★★★★★ 5
Life Changing Masterpiece on the Father's Love.
Format: Paperback
Life changing. So thankful for this masterpiece on the Father's Love.
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Reviewed in the United States on August 13, 2025
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S. Walker
Chelsea, US
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Life changing truth - helped me tremendously!
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This book has principles I have never heard taught anywhere else. They have changed my life as I incorporate them into my heart and mind. One of the most powerful is that you already have all the love your heart is looking for. You simply need to learn how to receive it. You have the Holy Spirit and He is the Source of all love. So simple, yet so profound and life changing. Teach your soul how to receive His love and you will notice a huge difference in your mindset, your emotions, your enjoyment of life, etc. I've read this book twice in order to really try to get this truth inside me. I have bought many copies of this book and given them to friends who also say that it has changed their life. I highly recommend it. God's love is something we all long for deeply, yet we hear such little teaching on. You can also get some of the author's teachings on CD at his web site: [...] He has graduated to his heavenly reward, but his wife continues his ministry today.
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Reviewed in the United States on November 9, 2008
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Great read
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Good read
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Reviewed in the United States on August 15, 2025
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Stephen W. Hiemstra ﻦ
Omaha, US
★★★★★ 5
Silk Shares Wisdom About Relationships
Format: Paperback
The intrusion of technology into our lives has increased the time spent interacting with machines and reduced the time spent interacting with people. Because developing healthy relationships take time, the reallocation of time away from development of healthy relationships has contributed to declining civility and increasing violence, both at home and in public places. Against this rather bleak environment, an emerging role for the church in these postmodern times has been to teach the basic relational and social skills that can no longer be assumed to exist: enter Danny Silk. In his book, Keep Your Love On, Danny Silk starts by writing: “I wrote this book to help people build, strengthen, and heal their relational connections.” (11) Silk sees three themes as components of healthy relationships—connection, communication, and setting boundaries (12)—and he structures his book around these three themes. Let me turn to each of these themes in turn. Connection. Silk starts his discussion of connection by distinguishing powerful people from powerless people, writing: “You need to be a powerful person. Powerful people take responsibility for their lives and choices. Powerful people choose who they want to be with, what they are going to pursue in life, and how they are going to go after it.” (20) Being powerful is important in relationship because: “A healthy, lasting relationship can only be built between two people who choose one another and take full responsibility for that choice.” (20) Powerless people are driven by fear and anxiety in making choices and look to other people to fill in for their perceived lack of power (21-24); powerful people realize that they can only control themselves and do not look to others to solve their problems (25). Consequently, it is powerless people who feel a need to role-play as victims, villains, or rescuers (23), because these roles focus on sharing power that powerless people feel they lack, as Silk writes: “Powerless people use various tactics, such as getting upset, withdrawing, nagging, ridiculing, pouting, crying, or getting angry, to pressure, manipulate, and punishing one another into keeping their pact” [in being victims, villains, or rescuers] (24). Real love is a challenge for powerless people because being deeply insecure in themselves they approach relationships as consumers (21) who have trouble being full partners in relationships … Obviously, a lot more can be said about the subject of connection and relationships. Communication. Silk sees communication as a transaction between the inner and outer life, citing Jesus: “The good person out of the good treasure of his heart produces good, and the evil person out of his evil treasure produces evil, for out of the abundance of the heart his mouth speaks.” (Luke 6:45 ESV; 81) Silk sees powerful people insisting on assertive communication where: “My thoughts, feelings, and needs matter and so do yours” (86), not motivated by fear. Powerless people are governed by fear, trying “to hide what is really going on inside” (81), not able or willing to communicate on an equal basis. Instead, powerless people adopt a passive communication style (you matter, I don’t), an aggressive style (I matter, you don’t), or a passive aggressive style (you matter, but not really) (82-84). Silk offers some helpful advice on dealing with these three powerless, communication styles: “A powerful assertive communicator responds to a passive person with, ‘What are you going to do about it?’ They respond to an aggressive person with, ‘I can only talk with you when you decide to be respectful.’ And they respond to a passive aggressive person with, ‘We can talk later when you choose to be responsible and tell me what is really going on.’” (87) Clearly, not everyone starts out as an assertive communicator—Silk himself admits that he started out as a passive communicator married to an aggressive communicator. Because he had to learn to be an assertive communicator paying attention to the needs of others, there is hope for the rest of us. Boundaries. Silk begins his discussion of boundaries by observing: “…not everyone should have the same access to you. You are responsible to manage different levels of intimacy, responsibilities, influence, and trust with people in your life.” (124) Silk starts by recounting several stories about Christians who did not understand this issue of levels of intimacy and counters these stories by observing that “Jesus prioritized certain relationships over others”, as in (most intimate) =>God the Father=>John=>Peter, James, and John=> the twelve disciples=>other disciples=>spectators=>everyone else (125). He goes on to state: “I love lots of people through my ministry. I counsel them, pray with them, laugh with them, and cry with them. But that’s it. They don’t get the bulk of my time, attention, or money. They don't get to know my heart and influence my decisions. After our few hours together, I leave those people at church and go home to my family and close friends.” 128-129) This insight into Silk’s own relationships might come as a shock to many Christians who have trouble establishing such priorities and maintaining them, especially Silk’s comment about the “God-spot” (126), reserved only for God—not spouse, not work, not kids, not political causes, and so on. You get the idea—if not, remember how the Ten Commandments start out: "I am the LORD your God, who brought you out of the land of Egypt, out of the house of slavery. "You shall have no other gods before me. "You shall not make for yourself a carved image, or any likeness of anything that is in heaven above, or that is in the earth beneath, or that is in the water under the earth. You shall not bow down to them or serve them, for I the LORD your God am a jealous God, visiting the iniquity of the fathers on the children to the third and the fourth generation of those who hate me, but showing steadfast love to thousands of those who love me and keep my commandments.” (Exod 20:2-6) Danny Silk’s book, Keep Your Love On, is an important resource for church groups, readable, and interesting. Before I had finished the first 20 pages, I started thinking of all the people that I would like to share this book with, especially newlyweds and family members. Read it; discuss it; share it. You will be glad that you did. [1] [...]
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Reviewed in the United States on August 8, 2016
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Maddy
Dallas, US
★★★★★ 5
Powerful and Convicting
Format: Kindle
I loved reading Keep Your Love On so much and have already recommended it to several family members, as well as friends. The book cuts through so many barriers that have kept me from being a “powerful” person who loves like Jesus and fights for connectedness with all my relationships. I have gained verbiage for behaviors I have fallen into but also tools and ways to change from familiarity to a bold, liberating way of living as Christ lives inside of me. I have learned the power of boundaries, the depth of loving others, as well as knowing what I can control and how to live accordingly. Every chapter gave so much wisdom and Danny Silk wove the love of God into every page of this book.
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Reviewed in the United States on June 27, 2025

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