lime for potted plants Lemon Lime Dracaena
SKU: 2654109744
lime for potted plants

lime for potted plants Lemon Lime Dracaena

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Description

lime for potted plants Lemon Lime DracaenaDracaena fragrans 'Lemon Lime' Dracaena fragrans 'Lemon Lime' is a striped cane form Dracaena with long, sword shaped leaves marked in lime green, cream, yellow green and deeper green. The colour sits in clean lengthwise bands, giving the plant a bright, graphic look on a naturally upright woody stem. As the plant matures, older lower leaves gradually shed and reveal a ringed cane with foliage held near the top. Mature stems may branch from active

Dracaena fragrans 'Lemon Lime'

Dracaena fragrans 'Lemon Lime' is a striped cane-form Dracaena with long, sword-shaped leaves marked in lime green, cream, yellow-green and deeper green. The colour sits in clean lengthwise bands, giving the plant a bright, graphic look on a naturally upright woody stem.

As the plant matures, older lower leaves gradually shed and reveal a ringed cane with foliage held near the top. Mature stems may branch from active nodes, creating several leafy heads while keeping the plant’s outline tall and tidy indoors.

Lime-striped foliage on woody canes

  • Foliage: Long, glossy leaves with cream, lime and deep green striping along the blade.
  • Growth habit: Cane-forming woody perennial with foliage clustered near the stem tips.
  • Mature shape: Slowly develops visible stems as older leaves age away from the lower cane.
  • Indoor effect: Brings fresh colour and vertical height in a relatively narrow footprint.

Stem growth and leaf renewal

Dracaena fragrans is a tropical African species in Asparagaceae, growing as a shrub or small tree in its native range. 'Lemon Lime' belongs to the striped Dracaena fragrans group; older references may still use Dracaena deremensis for these forms.

The cane is the plant’s structural centre. New leaves emerge from active tips, while older leaves gradually dry and drop as the stem lengthens. This slow reveal of the cane is part of normal growth when the newest leaves remain firm, upright and well coloured.

Care for bright cane growth

  • Light: Place in bright to moderate filtered light. Shield the pale bands from harsh midday sun, which can leave dry marks.
  • Watering: Let the upper half to two-thirds of the mix dry before watering thoroughly and emptying any standing water.
  • Root zone: Use a free-draining indoor mix with bark, pumice, perlite or similar mineral material for steady aeration.
  • Warmth: Keep around 18–27 °C and protect the pot from cold draughts, especially after watering.
  • Leaf care: Wipe dust from the long blades so the striped surface stays clean and well lit.
  • Feeding: Feed lightly during active growth. Salt build-up and heavy fertiliser can show quickly on pale leaf tissue.
  • Repotting: Move up only when roots have filled the pot, using a container that drains freely and holds the cane securely.
  • Pruning: Tall canes can be shortened in warm growing conditions; healthy nodes below the cut may push new shoots.

Symptoms to check on striped Dracaena

  • Brown tips: Review water quality, dry heat, fertiliser strength and irregular watering before trimming the damaged edges.
  • Fast yellowing: Check drainage and root moisture if several leaves yellow together, especially in lower light.
  • Soft cane base: Inspect the lower stem and roots after repeated wet conditions or a cold, damp spell.
  • Dry pale patches: Move the plant back from intense sun if the lightest bands become tan or papery.
  • Hidden pests: Look along leaf bases and cane joints for scale, mealybugs or fine webbing before damage spreads.

Pet and household safety

Dracaena fragrans 'Lemon Lime' contains saponins that can upset cats and dogs if the leaves are eaten. Place the plant away from chewing pets and clear away trimmed or fallen foliage.

Botanical name and etymology

The genus name Dracaena comes from Greek drakaina, meaning female dragon, a reference connected with dragon-tree resin in the wider genus. The species epithet fragrans means fragrant and refers to the scented flowers, which are uncommon on indoor plants. Older references may still use Dracaena deremensis for striped forms in this group.

Dracaena fragrans 'Lemon Lime' has bright lime-striped foliage, long leaves and upright cane growth.

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SKU: 2654109744

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Violet
Port Orchard, US
★★★★★ 5
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Very good! Read the whole thing in the span of 2 days, would read again!!
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Cassie Lynn
Alexandria, US
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made me homesick in the best way.
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I’m not good at reviews but this book was a beautiful disaster. I need to know of the story right now. lol.
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Reviewed in the United States on April 13, 2025
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Ash
Pawtucket, US
★★★★★ 3
cowgirl romance say what
Format: Paperback
When a city girl inherits a horse farm from her estranged late aunt. she never expects to fall head over heels for the grumpy hot farrier who dislikes her. Molly McDaniel's life is not going great, her crushing student loans haunt her, her back to back jobs to just get by take up most of her time, and her dream of starting an event planning business has been put on the backburner. When she gets news that she has inherited her late estranged aunt's run down, struggling horse barn, this could be her chance to finally get her life back in track if she can sell it.... yet when she gets there she meets Shani, the hot cocky farrier who was close to her aunt and who dislikes Molly for being the one to inherit the horse farm. Shani refuses to give up on the barn and dislikes Molly for even thinking about wanting to sell it. Molly knows she can't take care of the horse farm, she has no experience, yet the longer she spends there getting to know all the people who were working on it with her aunt and actually spending more time with Shani, she begins to fall in love with both the farm and Shani. Will Molly risk it all and keep the farm and try and convince Shani that she means to stay, or will she finally chase after her dreams and take the easy way out? This was a really easy to read cowgirl romance, but it just felt like it was missing something for me. I was hoping for some further development in the romance or some actual chemistry, but it just wasn't there for me. I really wanted to like this one but just felt like it was okay at best and that it could have been better. I would say out of all the Jennifer Dugan books I've read, this was the best one. Molly and Shani are opposites and dislike each other from the start but work to overcome their differences and stop fighting their attraction to one another. It's a easy contemporary farm girl x city girl romance and I think anyone who enjoys a sapphic romance should definitely give it a go.
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Reviewed in the United States on June 9, 2024
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Kimberly M. Brown
Lexington, US
★★★★★ 4
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Reviewed in the United States on March 14, 2025

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