Snake plant (Laurentii) (Sansevieria trifasciata Laurentii)
adopted: (approx) August, 2023
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Snake plant (Laurentii) (Sansevieria trifasciata Laurentii)
adopted: (approx) August, 2023
look at that snakeplant bouquet formation with a mix of bleeding heart, colocasia and red ivy. #snakeplant looks it’s absolute best when mixed with other filling foliage plants instead of the usual cluster of upright leaves. - #dracaenatrifasciata #bleedingheart #snakeplantlaurentii #laurentii #colocasia #colocasiaheterochroma #caladium #strobilanthesalternata #tropicalgarden #foliageplants #vines #snakeplantsofinstagram #sansevieria #sansevieratrifasciata #sansevieriavariegated #gardenpath #gardensofgoa #plantsmakepeoplehappy https://www.instagram.com/p/CSZYv0FsJEL/?utm_medium=tumblr
𝑺𝒂𝒏𝒔𝒆𝒗𝒊𝒆𝒓𝒊𝒂⠀ 🐍🪴 #laurentii⠀ ⠀ ⠀ I’ve collected quite a few varieties of #sansevieria over the years. I like to tie a ribbon around them sometimes to create a little more vertical space but I also love to let them sprawl out.⠀ ⠀ ⠀ 🤩 I think I should get my hands on some #goldhani next! ⠀ ⠀ Do you love snake plants too? ⠀ 📝 Are any on your wish list?⠀ ⠀ ⠀ (at Miami, Florida) https://www.instagram.com/p/CI53MAHAS9_/?igshid=10ae056nzbmbd
My #sansevieria #laurentii are having babies!! #plants #snakeplants #houseplants #igersnyc (at Brooklyn, New York) https://www.instagram.com/p/CFnBdKNBIJ-/?igshid=60p27gfes68i
One positive aspect of #quarantine is that I have been learning more about houseplants. I was particularly inspired by Amanda at @planterina and her wonderful IG feed and YouTube channel. On Friday I acquired two lovely #Sansevieria #Laurentii and a ZZ Plant. I put them on my bedroom window sill where they seem to be happy. It makes me happy and peaceful just looking at them every morning when I wake up and every evening before falling asleep. #houseplants #planterina @costafarms (at Brooklyn, New York) https://www.instagram.com/p/CE4xWGjBSvt/?igshid=14jv5851doj5
Sansevieria Laurentii
Aqua Sancti Laurentii
San Lorenzo al Mare (IM) è nominato per la prima volta nel XV secolo come “VILLA SANCTI LAURENTII” quando con tale nome si indicò l’abitato che sorgeva alla foce del torrente omonimo, con cui si chiudeva il vasto complesso costiero dell’agro di Taggia. La storia del paese, come si intende dal toponimo, fu sempre legata al suo corso d’acqua: il San Lorenzo nasce dal Monte Follia (m 1010) e prima…
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Sansevieria Trifasciata occupies a special place in our hearts. We’re so used to seeing them in offices and lobbies that it’s easy to overlook just how striking these plants are. In the workaday world, you’re most likely to encounter the Laurentii or Zeylanica varieties. And though we prefer not to play favorites, we have to admit a prejudice in favor of the Black Gold variety.
Zeylanica
Laurentii
How this plant manages to strike a visual balance between dynamic and understated is difficult to say. Its elongated spade shape, coupled with its glossy texture—it’s known, among other monikers, as St. George’s Sword and Mother-in-law’s Tongue—certainly helps to settle it into that ambiguous region between somewhat familiar, and wholly bizarre. And we do mean bizarre. You probably wouldn’t have believed us if we told you, but Snake Plant is actually in the same family as edible asparagus.
Believe us. We know a thing or two about this stuff.
Hardy and forgiving, Snake Plant is tolerant of even the lowest light levels. In the wild, it can be found everywhere from the dark jungle floors of the Congo, to the light woodlands of Nigeria. Its resilience to environmental conditions carries over even into the urban environment. In winter, it can survive months of irregular watering, sustaining itself for weeks at a time on a single hydration fix with little to no ill affects.
It’s indestructible, weird, and looks like a stack of green swords. And that’s why we love it.
One last fun fact. NASA (a broad coalition of really smart people) considers Sansevieria one of the best plants for improving air quality, citing its ability to passively absorb nitrogen oxides and formaldehyde present in the air around it.
There probably is no better endorsement than praise from the preeminent body of scientists on Earth, but it couldn’t hurt to say again that we really, really dig this plant.