SKU: 67728612375
lemon surprise dracaena care

lemon surprise dracaena care Lemon Surprise Dracaena

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Description

lemon surprise dracaena care Lemon Surprise DracaenaDracaena fragrans 'Lemon Surprise' Dracaena fragrans 'Lemon Surprise' is a compact striped Dracaena with short, lightly curled leaves and lemon green outer margins. Its foliage gathers into a dense crown, with grey green centres, pale inner lines and yellow green edges creating a fresh layered pattern. The leaves curve gently around the growing point, so the plant has a lively, rounded outline from a young size. This curled foliage gives the striping

Dracaena fragrans 'Lemon Surprise'

Dracaena fragrans 'Lemon Surprise' is a compact striped Dracaena with short, lightly curled leaves and lemon-green outer margins. Its foliage gathers into a dense crown, with grey-green centres, pale inner lines and yellow-green edges creating a fresh layered pattern.

The leaves curve gently around the growing point, so the plant has a lively, rounded outline from a young size. This curled foliage gives the striping extra movement as the leaves catch light from different angles.

Curled lemon-green foliage

  • Foliage: Grey-green leaf centres framed by narrow pale lines and wider yellow-green margins.
  • Leaf shape: Shorter blades with a light curl that builds a dense, rounded crown.
  • Growth habit: Compact cane Dracaena with foliage held closely around the active stem tip.
  • Cultivar origin: Documented as a natural sport mutation of Dracaena fragrans 'Surprise'.

Compact sport with a dense crown

'Lemon Surprise' is documented in its plant patent as a sport mutation of Dracaena fragrans 'Surprise', selected by Ruud A. M. Scheffers in Honselersdijk, the Netherlands, in 1996. The patent records compact growth, thick leaves, curled margins and the grey-green, white and yellow-green banding that defines this cultivar.

The compact crown stays firmer when water is applied at substrate level, the crown stays dry and the substrate remains airy around the short cane and close-set leaf bases.

Care for curled, close-set leaves

  • Light: Grow in bright filtered light or a clear moderate-light position. Pale margins are sensitive to harsh direct sun.
  • Watering: Water once roughly the upper half of the potting mix has dried, then let the pot drain completely.
  • Mix: Use a chunky, moisture-buffered substrate with bark, perlite, pumice or another aerating component.
  • Temperature: Keep in a stable warm room around 18–26 °C and away from cold windowsills.
  • Humidity: Average household humidity is usually suitable when the roots are managed carefully and the leaves stay clean.
  • Feeding: Apply diluted fertiliser during active growth. Pale tissue can show salt stress as brown tips or edge marks.
  • Pot size: Repot one size up when roots fill the container; a proportionate pot helps the lower mix dry evenly.
  • Propagation: Healthy cane or top cuttings can root in warmth after the cut surface has had time to callus.

Crown and root stress signs

  • Brown margins: Check sun exposure, dry heat, mineral-heavy water and fertiliser strength before changing the watering pattern.
  • Yellow centre leaves: Look for trapped moisture around the crown or wet mix around the cane base.
  • Tighter curling: Feel the substrate and inspect roots, as both drought stress and root damage can make leaves contract.
  • Loose lower foliage: Some old-leaf shedding is natural, but quick loss points to moisture, temperature or root stress.
  • Pest hiding places: Check curled edges and leaf bases for mites, scale and mealybugs during routine cleaning.

Safe placement with pets

The leaves of Dracaena fragrans 'Lemon Surprise' can cause digestive upset in cats and dogs if chewed. Keep the compact crown out of reach of pets, and dispose of fallen or pruned leaves promptly.

Cultivar origin

Dracaena is derived from Greek drakaina, meaning female dragon. The species name fragrans refers to the fragrant flowers of Dracaena fragrans, though flowering is rare in ordinary indoor conditions. 'Lemon Surprise' has documented cultivar background through its plant patent, which records it as a sport of Dracaena fragrans 'Surprise'.

Dracaena fragrans 'Lemon Surprise' has compact cane growth, curled lemon-edged leaves and a dense bright crown.

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SKU: 67728612375

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Mike
Battle Creek, US
★★★★★ 5
A must read for all believers!
Practical advice on developing the higher self to command the lower self to achieve internal happiness that is not dependent on worldly outcomes. If you are an atheist then you might only benefit from the first couple chapters, some of the later chapters are more theoretical supported by logic based on holy scriptures like the Quran, Hadith, or Psalms. This is a must-read for all believers, especially Muslims! Many blessings to Al-Ghazzali, this book is one of my all-time favorites!
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Reviewed in the United States on February 1, 2018
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omer tamer
Birmingham, US
★★★★★ 5
is a great scholar if Islam who consolidated the tenets of the ...
Imam Gazali, also known as Hujjatul Islam, is a great scholar if Islam who consolidated the tenets of the religion against corruption. The Alchemy of Happiness is a must read for anyone who wishes to take the journey for self explotation, to better understand the self; and by doing so, establish a solid relationship with Allah, the lord of the heavens and the earth and everything in between. The true happiness will only come through such a relationship.
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Reviewed in the United States on March 9, 2016
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Suleman kazi
Battle Creek, US
★★★★★ 3
Weird translation
Format: Paperback
Good content but the translation is a bit off. Dont know if I can trust the information in it completely. Still okay for the price i guess
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Reviewed in the United States on June 19, 2025
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Lisa Mitchell, MFT, ATR
Grantham, US
★★★★★ 5
A letter of Gratitude to Irv Yalom for Creatures of a Day.
Format: Hardcover
Dear Irv Yalom, This letter is a declaration of gratitude for your newly published book, Creatures of a Day, and the artful legacy you’ve bestowed upon the field of psychotherapy. In the era of fast technology and mass production, your attention to relationship and the handcrafted nature of therapy is a life line. In all of your 50 years as a psychotherapist, you didn’t sell out for clinical blueprints and formulaic approaches. Instead, you opted to stay true to what you knew--the here and now, the importance of the therapeutic relationship, and your own internal thoughts and experiences as essential elements for your work with clients. Creatures of a Day waves a flag and asks us to take notice. It invites us back into the mystery of our work and reminds us to celebrate our humanness. Your masterful story telling allows us to see you and your clients in action, mistakes and vulnerabilities included, and shares pivotal moments that will provoke thoughtful learning for generations of therapists. So thank you for this. You show us your mistakes You see, your books (especially Love’s Executioner and Creatures of a Day) let us into your thoughts and experiences. We get to hear you talk to yourself and occasionally grapple with doubt. We get to know your own vulnerabilities and how they influence your therapeutic relationships. This is such a rare view. And I am hungry for it. There are too few books, too few videos, and fewer workshops or trainings that offer this kind of perspective for therapists. We don’t get to see masters make mistakes. We don’t get to hear supervisors or consultants narrate their doubts. So, I consider your book an invitation to write about my own similar encounters in my work. And to continue to make this kind of conversation central to my trainings and retreats for therapists. Thank you for the inspiration and the permission. You offer central themes and an individualized perspective As a collection of psychotherapy tales, I think of Creatures of a Day as a series. Like a series of paintings that are created around central themes, your tales invite us to look at the existential themes of aging, death, and connectedness. And, just like a painting series, each reader will take with them a message that is individualized and of unique importance to him/her. In this way, you are truly exhibiting your art as a writer and a psychotherapist. In Creatures of a Day, two patients read the same book and take from it a very different, but beautifully applicable, message. A nurse perceives the angry words she hissed to her dying patient completely opposite of the way in which they were received by the woman she was treating. And a case that you filed away as a blunder turns out to have been a life changer that is only revealed about a decade or so later. This is a reminder to me that while we can’t predict how our art is received, we can in fact commit to creating and collaborating in the very best way we can. You invite humanness and the art of relationship I’d like to let you know that in addition to the invitation to write about my experience as a therapist, I welcome your permission to be human with my clients. And, with that comes a renewed dedication to knowing and experiencing what being human is for me. This means deepening my relationship with my art, continuing my work in therapy, and showing up with the same honesty and openness that you let us see in your book. You make risk a good thing You ask your patients to risk and use this in as a very important subject during the course of treatment. You take several risks in Creatures of a Day, and show us that risks are a vital part of being an authentic and real therapist. You show us that in your work you are just being honest and attending to your experience and the client’s experience. In fact it is more risky to be untruthful or hide than it is to show up and attend the the relationship. You inspire me I won’t stop practicing. You inspire me to continue to write about my own work. And in my own small way, carry your legacy forward. Once again, thank you for your guidance, your influence, and your legacy. Lisa Mitchell, MFT, ATR, LPC www.innercanvas.com
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Reviewed in the United States on March 31, 2015
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Coleman Family
Birmingham, US
★★★★★ 5
Short book, big recommendation!
Format: Hardcover
Great book, smooth read that is not overly technical for those who aren't therapists themselves. Examines large existential questions in a digestible format with each chapter being a different real world story. Highly recommend.
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Reviewed in the United States on April 6, 2026

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