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indoor money tree plant feng shui

indoor money tree plant feng shui Money Tree Plants ‘Pachira aquatica’

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Description

indoor money tree plant feng shui Money Tree Plants ‘Pachira aquatica’The Money Tree Plant, known as Pachira aquatica, is one of the best low maintenance houseplants prized for its braided trunk, lush green leaves, and association with prosperity and good fortune. In short, it's called the Money Tree because of its symbolic ties to luck, wealth, and good fortune, not because it actually grows money, though some people do jokingly wish it did! Originating from tropical wetlands, this plant has gained immense popularity

The Money Tree Plant, known as Pachira aquatica, is one of the best low-maintenance houseplants prized for its braided trunk, lush green leaves, and association with prosperity and good fortune. In short, it's called the Money Tree because of its symbolic ties to luck, wealth, and good fortune, not because it actually grows money, though some people do jokingly wish it did! 

Originating from tropical wetlands, this plant has gained immense popularity in modern homes, offices, and even business spaces across the world. The Money tree bonsai is a compact, artistic version of the traditional plant, often used to symbolize wealth and harmony in feng shui practices. 

According to the principles of Feng Shui, the Money Tree is believed to bring luck, financial prosperity, and positive energy when placed in specific areas of a home or office. It is commonly placed in the southeast corner—known as the "wealth corner"—to invite abundance and growth. The braided trunk is said to trap fortune within its folds, while the five-lobed leaves represent the five fundamental elements: earth, water, fire, wind, and metal, creating a balanced flow of chi (energy). 

The Pachira aquatica extremely fast growing up to 24 inches per year.

In its natural habitat, the Money Tree can grow up to 60 feet tall, but as a houseplant it can grow up to 6 feet tall indoors, and up to 12 feet tall outdoors in ideal your garden.

Native to Central and South America, the money tree plant has several other common names such as Malabar Chestnut, Guiana Chestnut, Chinese money tree, and Provision Tree.

The Money tree is admired for its glossy, hand-shaped palmate leaves that radiate from a central point, often with five to seven leaflets per stem, resembling an open hand.

The most iconic form features a braided trunk, achieved when several young stems are woven together while pliable and then grow as one. This braided appearance adds a sculptural quality and is often viewed as a symbolic protection of wealth.

The Money tree blooms during spring with large, showy white or cream-colored flowers with long stamens and a pleasant fragrance. These flowers later develop into large, woody seed pods containing edible chestnut-like nuts. 

One of the plant’s most unique qualities is its adaptability to various environments—it can thrive indoors with minimal care, tolerate low humidity if acclimated properly, and purify indoor air. Its symbolic significance, combined with its ornamental structure, makes it a favorite for gifting during housewarmings, business openings, and holidays.  

When and How to Water Your Monet Tree Plant 

The Money Tree is moderately drought-tolerant due to its thick, water-storing trunk, but it thrives with a consistent watering schedule that avoids soggy roots. Always check the top 2 inches of soil for dryness before watering to prevent overwatering. Water your Money Tree every 7–10 days during the growing season with deep watering and reduce to once every 3–4 weeks in the dormant season.  

From March to August, during the growing season, water thoroughly once every 7–10 days, ensuring excess water drains out of the pot. This is the Money tree plant’s active period, when it needs more hydration to support new foliage growth. Make sure the soil remains moist but never soggy, and consider misting the leaves lightly to increase humidity. 

From September to February, in the dormant season, reduce watering to once every 3–4 weeks, providing just enough to prevent the roots from drying out. Overwatering in winter is a common mistake that can lead to root rot. Keep it in a warm spot and ensure proper drainage during these cooler months. 

Light Requirements – Where to Place Your Money Tree 

When growing indoors, the Money tree plant thrives in bright, indirect light for 6–8 hours a day.

Place them near east- or south-facing windows, but avoid direct sunlight, which can scorch the leaves.

They also adapt well to fluorescent lighting, making them ideal for offices and low-light homes.

When grown outdoors, place your Pachira Money Tree in a location that receives partial shade or filtered sunlight for 4–6 hours daily.

Direct outdoor sun, especially in hot climates, can burn the leaves. A shaded patio, balcony, or under taller plants works well, as long as there's good airflow. 

Avoid low-light environments indoors or full sun outdoors, as both can cause stress. While adaptable, poor lighting leads to slow growth, leaf drop, or legginess. Rotate the plant occasionally for even light exposure and symmetrical growth. 

Optimal Soil & Fertilizer Needs 

Use a well-draining peat-based soil mixed with perlite or sand and fertilize once a year in the spring. The goal is to prevent waterlogging while retaining enough moisture for root absorption. Avoid heavy or clay-based soil. Planet Desert has specialized potting soil, opens in a new tabGo to Soil cactus mix blend 1 gal 4 qt cacti succulent dirt compost growing media that includes an organic substrate with mycorrhizae to help with the growth of a healthy root system, to help your money plant thrive. 

Fertilize once a year in the spring with a balanced, water-soluble NPK fertilizer of about 5-10-5. Do not fertilize in the dormant months, as the plant's growth slows and excess nutrients can harm it. Adding organic matter such as worm castings or compost can enhance soil fertility, especially in pots. Make sure the container has drainage holes and never let the plant sit in standing water. 

Indoor Money Tree Growing Requirements 

When growing indoors, the Money Tree prefers temperatures between 65°F and 80°F, moderate humidity, and bright indirect light. To keep it healthy, place it near a bright window where it can receive 6–8 hours of filtered sunlight daily—east, south, or west-facing windows are ideal. Avoid direct sun, which can scorch the leaves, and supplement with a grow light if natural light is limited. The plant thrives in humidity levels of around 50–60%, which you can maintain with a humidifier, pebble tray, or regular misting, especially during dry winter months. Consistent temperatures are important; keep the plant away from drafts, heaters, or AC vents, as sudden changes can lead to leaf drop or stress. With stable conditions and good light, the Money Tree makes a striking and low-maintenance indoor companion. 

Hardiness Zones & More 

In the United States, this is mostly grown as an indoor plant, but if you live in warmer climates like southern Florida or Hawaii, specifically in USDA Zones 10-12, you may be able to cultivate it outdoors year-round with care.

In these zones, choose a location that receives bright morning sunlight with partial shade in the afternoon to avoid scorching the leaves.

Humidity should be maintained at moderate to high levels, ideally above 50%, to support healthy growth and prevent leaf drop. Use a humidity tray or humidifier to maintain 40–60% humidity indoors during winter. 

Wildlife – Money Tree Flower Attracts the Following Friendly Pollinators 

The Money Tree Flower is known to attract a variety of friendly pollinators, including butterflies, bees, bats, and hummingbirds. These creatures play a crucial role in the ecosystem by helping to pollinate plants and ensure their reproduction.  

Butterflies
Bees
Hummingbirds
Lady Bugs
Multi Pollinators
Other Birds

According to the ASPCA, the Pachira aquatica is non-toxic to humans, cats, dogs, and horses. This makes it a great option for pet-friendly households. However, ingestion of large amounts may still cause mild stomach upset.

How to propagate a Money Tree 

The Chinese money tree can be propagated easily through stem cuttings taken during spring or early summer. Choose a healthy branch with at least two leaf nodes and cut it using clean, sharp scissors. Dip the cut end in rooting hormone and plant it in moist, well-draining soil. Keep the pot in bright, indirect light and maintain consistent humidity using a plastic dome or humidity tray. Roots typically form in 3–4 weeks. Once rooted, treat the new plant like a mature specimen. 

Key Takeaways

  1. According to feng shui, the popular houseplant money tree is a symbol that, when placed in homes or offices, attracts wealth, good fortune, and positive energy.
  2. This tropical plant can grow up to 24 inches per year, making it extremely fast-growing option for indoor greenery.
  3. According to ASPCA, it is non-toxic to cats and dogs, making it a pet-friendly houseplant.
  4. Money Tree plants are often grown and styled as bonsai, featuring braided trunks and compact foliage for decorative appeal.
  5. The plant thrives indoors with bright, indirect light and is easy to maintain with moderate watering and occasional pruning.

The Bottom Line 

Overall, the Money Tree ‘Pachira aquatica’ is a stylish, popular houseplant with braided stems and lush green leaves. It thrives with moderate watering, bright indirect light, and well-draining soil. Known for its symbolism of good fortune and prosperity, it is a popular choice for both indoor and outdoor décor. With its non-toxic nature, humidity tolerance, and low maintenance needs, it’s an excellent plant for beginners and collectors alike. As both a botanical treasure and a Feng Shui favorite, the Money Tree truly lives up to its name—bringing a sense of calm, balance, and prosperity to all who grow it. Order your very own Money tree for sale today! 

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Angelo or Nadia
Lowell, US
★★★★★ 5
Perfect for beginners to explore with a minimum investment if making video games is for you
Format: Kindle
As an absolute beginner I found the book perfect for anyone that wants to explore the making of video games without having to studying lot of software programming. Prior to this I also read the similar book on Unity and found that for an absolute beginner this is perhaps a more gentle introduction. Godot seems to be at this level simpler than Unity as all the necessary elements to make a meaningful game are self contained. Patrick is an excellent teacher and drives you step by step to the point where you would be able to create on your own a multi scene 3D environment. Just getting there is very satisfying as I was able to surprise friends and family on my new acquired skill. Clearly after tasting what you can do with this book you must commit to some level of learning of software and this is where you need to ask yourself if your "exploration" is over or you are so thrilled you want to become a pro. This is entirely up to you, Patrick has shown you the way with a minimum investment of time and money, good luck whatever you decide to do.
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Reviewed in the United States on April 14, 2021
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Hans O Karlsson
Charlottesville, US
★★★★★ 3
Good introduction, but outdated now with Godot 4
Format: Kindle
It was a great introduction to Godot 3, but now after Godot 4 is out, the water plugin doesn’t work anymore used in the book.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 12, 2024
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Timothy Bumpus
Los Angeles, US
★★★★★ 2
Good, but only for complete beginners who haven’t seen the tutorials on the Godot website
Format: Kindle
Skippable with free tutorials found on the web both from official and unofficial resources. A good starting block for those who are completely new to the concept and want to get started with Godot.
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Reviewed in the United States on August 31, 2023
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L. Schmiesing
Lexington, US
★★★★★ 5
Superbly written, relatable, important, and humanistic
Format: Hardcover
I purchased the hardback of this book when I heard that Meta was trying to block its publication. And I’m so glad I did. The book was a jaw-dropping, gripping read that held me in a trance. It’s my understanding that the legal efforts on Meta’s part to have the book blocked have only made it more popular. After reading the book, I’m not surprised. Meta is run by short-sighted, narcissistic, and self-important people who often act like idiot toddlers. Mine. Mine. Gimme. Gimme. Cake. More. More. Once I received the book, I was reluctant to dive in, thinking it would be a challenging read with technology and boring stuff, but I was wrong with that assessment. The book is superbly written, relatable, and humanistic, and made me proud of Sarah for her bravery in becoming a whistleblower. A New Zealand native, Sarah is a lawyer who worked as a diplomat for the United Nations before doggedly selling herself on the staff at Facebook for a job within the organization that she felt could better the world. After working in the upper stratosphere echelons of Facebook for around six years, she has the receipts to prove that the dream of what it could be, became a nightmare. She lays the groundwork for her assertions against Facebook/Meta building her credibility with the reader as she starts from her youth and before the hire. Eventually becoming an intricate player within the Facebook organization, she is a brilliantly smart person (and writer), and she struggles with the culture and personalities of the privileged and out-of-touch leadership who carelessly treat her not as a person, but as a tool. She is often in physical danger too! I was shocked at how often the top leadership - Mark, other top execs, and Sheryl Sandberg - could have cared less about Sarah’s pain, pressure, obstacles, and danger. Not to mention their ignoring Sarah’s wisdom and advice. I’d heard of Sheryl Sandberg – she of the hot book – Lean In. As Oprah and CEOs and other high flyers applauded Sheryl’s awesomeness and her book, I recall at the time feeling intrigued, but super skeptical. See me giving a side eye to the situation and rejecting being given life coaching by a billionaire. It turns out my instincts were right. It’s easier to lean in when you have a staff of nannies, maids, cooks, toadies, and private jets. But she expects everyone to be just as work-driven and productive as her. If you’ve seen the great show Succession – think of the personal assistants portrayed on that show. Their job is to just do – never question – no matter how stupid the task or how impossible the ask. (Do you remember the scene on funeral day when Kendall Roy asks his fast-walking-in-heels personal assistant why she has a meeting scheduled with him and she says in a nervous sing-song – oh, we can talk about it then. He stops walking and presses her for an answer on the spot and she softballs intimating that she is thinking about making a change – and he’s pissed and says like thanks a lot for bringing this up today, my father just died. But she didn’t – he did…. Whatever. You cannot win). Another example. Think Meryl Streep in The Devil Wears Prada asking for the yet-unpublished Harry Potter books to be delivered to her children that the same day. There is a story in Sarah’s book where while traveling in Mexico with the top execs, she gets a frantic call from her husband – there is a horrible situation going on at home in Manhattan with their nanny and the baby (for spoilers – I won’t tell you what was happening but it’s scary as heck). Sarah, trapped and traveling in a car, relays or shares the story about the in-real-time event, because . . . how could you not! Later, in her review, she is told that it was inappropriate for her to talk about her personal life and to basically keep her mouth shut and focus on the job. Lean in and keep your mothering and baby problems to yourself! And part of the problem with all this is that Sarah is not even an “assistant” – she is part of the team. But she is often treated like a body. Another time in a review they said she was ‘difficult to reach’ during the review period and she had to remind them that she was in an actual coma in the hospital. Still – they thought it pertinent and left the negative content as a strike against her. I found the number of personal cruelties to Sarah abhorrent – but Sarah is not a whiner. No. She stayed because she believed in her work and the possible differences she (and presumably, hopefully? others) could make. But the world-changing greed on Facebook’s part to ignore moral and privacy issues, leverage people’s vulnerabilities, profit on the backs of victims, to control the flow of information, and have a pay-to-play mindset in working with an assortment of hate organizations, movements, and autocrats, and to take it further into doing whatever they want as long as they keep growing and gaining more users for their platforms changed everything. Meta is a world gobbler. A globe-stroking Golem who has Thanos power and it’s scarier than you know what. And Facebook had FACEBOOK employees embedded in the Trump campaign to assist them in maximizing the algorithms and giving them whatever tools and access that others didn’t receive. Millions of dollars were spent targeting and spreading the thousands of Trump messages . . . saying God knows what. (Eating cats and dogs?) Harness the press. Harness the information sent to the masses. Pay to ride. Own the world. I’m not sure how Sarah got away with publishing the book, but I applaud the publisher (and I’m assuming a team of lawyers) for going forward with the publication. Read it. Learn from it. I have. But now what do I do? I use Facebook and Instagram– I need to for my business. Don’t I? Maybe Facebook will decide for me after some creepy search retaliates against me for siding with Sarah and for this review. A second is all it takes for me to go bye bye for some infringement or for breaking some policy I’ll never get an answer for. God help us all.
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Reviewed in the United States on April 19, 2025
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Stephan Makatita
Bozeman, US
★★★★★ 4
Careless People: Power, Marketing, and the (Absent) Moral Boundaries at Facebook
Format: Hardcover
Careless People: Power, Marketing, and the (Absent) Moral Boundaries at Facebook Sarah Wynne-Williams, former Director of Public Policy at Facebook, spent seven years at the company. In Careless People, she takes the reader behind the scenes of the world’s largest social media platform. A hopeful mission She shows how Facebook’s original idealistic mission, “to make the world more open and connected”, was quickly overshadowed by internal tensions, political interests, and ethical dilemmas. Wynne-Williams began her career in the public sector. Driven by a strong sense of civic duty, she was initially enthusiastic about Facebook’s mission, but soon grew disillusioned with how things worked behind closed doors. In her book, she describes how commercial interests and the drive for rapid growth consistently outweighed (positive) social impact. This fundamental tension runs throughout the book. Diplomacy, data, and dominance The book offers a rare, and at times revealing, glimpse into Facebook’s international strategy. Wynne-Williams describes how the company organized state visits, attempted to build diplomatic relationships, and how many of these efforts ended in awkward failure. Particularly notable is Facebook’s push to enter the Chinese market, including Mark Zuckerberg’s personal effort to learn Mandarin. Facebook’s leadership: no innocent bystanders Wynne-Williams doesn’t spare the company’s executive leadership. She paints a picture of a culture riddled with sexual misconduct, power plays, and rivalries. The workplace environment she describes, full of intrigue, temper outbursts, and a striking lack of psychological safety, stands in stark contrast to Facebook’s carefully cultivated public image. This insight is valuable not only for those following Facebook, but for anyone seeking to understand how power and growth shape company culture in the tech sector. Facebook as a PR machine One of the book’s core revelations is how Facebook began to operate less as a technology company and more as a PR machine. Initiatives like internet.org were presented as altruistic, but in practice were primarily aimed at market expansion. The company’s role in political campaigns, notably Donald Trump’s election, is sharply laid out. The book illustrates how thin the line is between innovation and manipulation when user data is leveraged at scale for political and commercial gain. Insightful, but not always credible Wynne-Williams’ personal tone makes the book engaging and accessible. Her commitment to the mission, and her growing frustration, are palpable. Yet her constant presence as narrator sometimes undermines the story’s credibility. Dramatic anecdotes, coincidental twists, and strong personal judgments occasionally create distance, especially when the subject matter demands nuance. That’s unfortunate, because the topics she raises, ethics, global power dynamics, and the impact on young users, deserve to speak for themselves. Lessons for the future What stays with the reader is how even the most powerful tech companies appear vulnerable when ideals clash with growth ambitions. The book shows how easily ethical boundaries blur when billions are at stake. For companies, policymakers, and marketers, it offers a confronting mirror: rapid growth and profit never come without moral cost. Final verdict Careless People is an accessible and insightful book that offers a unique perspective on the inner workings of Facebook and Big Tech. Despite stylistic shortcomings, a tendency toward dramatization, and a sometimes overly subjective voice, it’s a worthwhile read for anyone looking to understand the intersection of technology, power, and marketing. Personally, I found it especially compelling because I’ve taken the opposite path: from marketing and tech into public service. That gives me a unique appreciation of the tension Wynne-Williams describes, the ongoing conflict between social ideals and commercial imperatives. The book lacks objectivity at times, but it undeniably prompts reflection. And that alone makes it more than worth the read. Rating: 7.5
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Reviewed in the United States on June 21, 2025

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