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ficus_spider_man

All about Jades and what lighting a varigated jade needs

ficus-spider-man
17 years ago

I have a dresser on the right side of my door up against a wall, it gets very little light so I was wondering what type of lighting would you guys recamend a clip on hanging light in perable I can pound a nail into the wall for it to attach to, I have a ficus benjamia by my south window, it is under a argosun dayspot 60 watt bulb. Is this brand of light good for a varigated or sunset jade plant only this time a 150 watt or do you recemend another type?

Do the fancy types of jades require speical care other then lighting? Do they grow as big or as fast as the common green or silver forms? How do you get Jade plants to flower I live in a warm house, 72 degrees. Also my room is humdid for the other plants which are tropical is this dangerous to jades? How often do you water them? pleae tell me all you can about jade plants

Comments (12)

  • aseedisapromise
    17 years ago

    Hi there,

    Lots of people on this forum know more about these kinds of things than I, but I am willing to say a few things. I recently purchased a varigated jade, so I am curious and hopeful people will answer other than me.

    I have heard that the varigated jades grow more slowly than the green ones. This would make sense to me, as they have less "food factory" clorophyll-laden parts.

    When I have had plants under lights inside, I have only used fluorescent bulbs. I would think a lot of plants couldn't take the heat from incandescents, but I don't have any experience specifically with varigated jades. Plain ones don't seem to be deterred by heat in my experience. My plain jades survive the summers outdoors here in SD where it is often 90-100 degrees F (30-35C). I guess I am just too cheap to run lights for plants that take a lot of juice. I'd rather buy plants!

    There are other threads about plain jades flowering. I put one up below.

    I have read threads about jades in containers outside that belonged to someone from Florida. So that is pretty humid, and warm as well. Probably they wouldn't need watered as often as otherwise. But these were again plain jades.

    I hope this is helpful, and that we'll hear from others soon.

    asiap.

    Here is a link that might be useful: Help my jade flower

  • dragonstone
    17 years ago

    I have only had bad experience with variegated jade. I received a huge clipping from a succulent sendoff. The poor thing just kept falling apart into smaller pieces that rotted away. Eventually, everything rotted away except for a leaf that rooted and started to grow a plant from it. I was excited until that also died.

    Though, I am starting to get interested in getting a variegated jade but instead of a clipping, I'm going to look for a well-established plant.

  • shapiro
    16 years ago

    We "summer" all our succulents and cacti out of doors. Then, late September or early October, we bring them indoors again. Each time we do this, the jades and the stapelia immediately produce buds and bloom. I conclude that the lower light indoors is the trigger. I don't know about South Dakota, but it works in Ontario!

  • passion_for_flowers
    16 years ago

    Shapiro,
    How old were your jades when they started blooming?I was wondering if there age has anything to do with them blooming? Or maybe size. My tallest one in the pot is just over 12 inches from the soil up.
    I bought mine I in a 4 inch pot and have had them in an 8 inch pot since Feb of 2006, which is when I cut them back in hopes of making thicker branches.
    Just took these two photos today. It has been out since late April and is still out except for a couple days last week when I brought them up onto my porch. So maybe I will get a bloom or two this fall. Fingers crossed.

    {{gwi:479189}}

    Top view, showing some color.

    {{gwi:479190}}

  • caudex1
    16 years ago

    My Jade is flowering now. It's about 24in tall with a 3in diameter trunk. My variegated jade is kept in full sun year round.

  • airedale4mom
    16 years ago

    caudex, what zone/area are you in that your jade is flowering so early? It's so hard to gauge whether info applies to me when posters don't fill out their zone info.

  • dufflebag2002
    16 years ago

    I have many many of mine setting flower buds at this time, I do have a 30% shade cloth covering them however.
    The ones that are not getting enough light have not set flowers yet. I live in CA zone 10. This year I had one in flower all year long, it was never out of flower, I certainly don't know the reason yet. We did have 5 days of a hard frost. (22F) We had under 4" of rain this past year through late Sept. The rain this past few weeks may have influenced them to flower early. Norma

  • User
    16 years ago

    Caudex, did I miss something? I'm looking at yr. pic for the buds, see none (maybe the pic is not so recent & yr. buds are happening now?)

  • airedale4mom
    16 years ago

    Thanks Caudex, for posting your zone info. While walking my dog this AM I noticed that the jade bush which I got my branch cutting from has flower buds (not opened yet) on it! This surprises me because this bush is in a lot of shade. Located on a small side yard slope with many very tall cyprus trees planted in front of it and a tall dark colored wood fence behind it. I literally have to peek between the cyprus looking for the bush and yet it has flowers. Further on my walk there is a full block of jade bushes in full sun. They took quite a beating during our 110 degree week recently. They have no flower buds and one branch has turned black and sort of charcoal like, dying off and crunchy. Other jades on my walk in full sun also have no buds yet. Interesting! The shaded jade never has red tips on it, truly is in a dark area with only peaks of light at certain times of the day.

    No buds on mine yet.

  • rita_h
    16 years ago

    I'm in west-side Oregon, zone 9... my jades are also in bud now. They usually bloom between Thanksgiving and Xmas. My variegated jade spends most of its time outside like its bigger green siblings, sitting under the dappled shade of the bigger plants. (No buds on it yet but it's young.)