areca palm cost Chrysalidocarpus lutescens
SKU: 19480972649
areca palm cost

areca palm cost Chrysalidocarpus lutescens

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Description

areca palm cost Chrysalidocarpus lutescensChrysalidocarpus lutescens Chrysalidocarpus lutescens, still widely known under the synonym Dypsis lutescens, is a clustering palm with upright cane like stems and long, arching feather leaves. Several stems rise from the base, creating a soft, fountain shaped crown with yellow green petioles and narrow leaflets arranged along each frond. Indoors, this palm develops slowly into a broad, leafy specimen with a layered vertical outline. As the stems

Chrysalidocarpus lutescens

Chrysalidocarpus lutescens, still widely known under the synonym Dypsis lutescens, is a clustering palm with upright cane-like stems and long, arching feather leaves. Several stems rise from the base, creating a soft, fountain-shaped crown with yellow-green petioles and narrow leaflets arranged along each frond.

Indoors, this palm develops slowly into a broad, leafy specimen with a layered vertical outline. As the stems mature, they become more defined, while the fronds keep the crown airy, layered, and finely textured.

Golden cane palm details

  • Golden cane palm forming grouped yellow-green stems
  • Arching pinnate fronds with many narrow green leaflets
  • Yellow-green leaf stalks and midribs give the plant its warm tone
  • Can form a sizeable indoor floor plant over time
  • Rarely flowers indoors; mature outdoor plants may produce yellow flowers and small fruits

Eastern Madagascar origin and clumping growth

Chrysalidocarpus lutescens is native to Madagascar and belongs to the palm family, Arecaceae. In habitat and tropical cultivation it can grow as a shrub-like or tree-like palm, with multiple stems forming a broad clump. Indoors, its final shape depends on light, root space, and steady watering.

Each stem grows from a central crown. Fully brown fronds can be removed at the base, while green fronds should stay in place so the palm retains enough leaf area for new fronds. New fronds emerge from the growing points and gradually open into the palm’s feathered canopy.

Because this palm forms a clump, uneven growth is normal: some canes may sit lower while newer stems fill the centre. Turn the pot occasionally so the crown develops evenly, and keep the leaf bases open enough for inspection because pests often settle where the fronds meet the stems.

Keeping Chrysalidocarpus lutescens evenly leafy

  • Light: Use a bright, indirect position. Gentle morning or late afternoon sun suits acclimated plants, while strong midday sun behind glass can scorch fronds.
  • Watering: Keep the substrate evenly lightly moist during active growth, then let the upper layer dry before watering again. Avoid cold, saturated soil.
  • Substrate: Use an airy, well-drained palm or houseplant mix with mineral drainage material to keep the root zone open.
  • Temperature: Keep the palm warm, ideally above 18 °C, and avoid cold draughts or temperatures below about 15 °C.
  • Humidity: Average to moderate indoor humidity is workable, although very dry heated air can crisp leaflet tips. Use a humidifier where winter air becomes persistently dry.
  • Feeding: Use a low-strength fertiliser in spring and summer. Too much feed can show as yellowing or salt stress on leaflet tips.
  • Repotting: Move up one pot size when roots have filled the container, often after 2–3 years. Avoid oversized pots that keep the mix wet for too long.
  • Pruning: Remove only fully spent fronds. Cutting green fronds reduces the palm’s active leaf area.
  • Leaf cleaning: Wipe dusty leaflets gently or rinse the fronds with lukewarm water so the narrow leaflets can receive light evenly.

Frond, cane and pest checks

  • Brown tips: Often linked to dry air, irregular watering, salt build-up, or old leaf age. Check moisture pattern and flush the substrate if fertiliser salts have built up.
  • Yellowing fronds: Can follow overwatering, poor drainage, low light, nutrient imbalance, or natural ageing of older leaves. Check the root zone before feeding.
  • Mites or scale insects: Fine stippling, webbing, sticky residue, or bumps on stems and leaf bases need early inspection and treatment.
  • Collapsed stems: Soft bases usually point to root or crown stress from persistently wet, cool conditions.

Pet-safe palm status

ASPCA treats the areca palm, Chrysalidocarpus lutescens, as non-toxic to cats and dogs. Sensitive pets may still get mild stomach upset from chewing the fronds.

Accepted name and synonym note

Chrysalidocarpus lutescens H.Wendl. is the accepted botanical name for this Arecaceae species. Dypsis lutescens remains a common synonym in horticulture. The genus name refers to chrysalis-like fruits, while lutescens means turning yellow, matching the yellow tones in the flowers, stems, and leaflet midribs.

Chrysalidocarpus lutescens grows into golden cane clusters with airy fronds and a full upright palm outline.

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Andrew Giberson
Whiting, US
★★★★★ 1
Worst company I’ve ever dealt with
This is probably the strongest version to use publicly because it stays factual, detailed, and angry without sounding unhinged. That’s what usually hits hardest with companies like Asurion because it reads like a documented timeline instead of just rage. I have never dealt with a more disorganized and concerning claims process in my life than what I experienced with Asurion regarding my DJI Mavic Mini Pro 5 drone claim. This entire nightmare started before the claim was even filed. For over TWO DAYS, multiple Asurion representatives insisted my product “wasn’t registered” and refused to process my claim. Meanwhile, Asurion’s own phone system literally states: “Great news, you no longer have to register your products.” Their own employees did not understand how their own system worked. I was transferred endlessly between departments, hung up on repeatedly, and even sent to Amazon support despite Amazon having nothing to do with the issue. It finally took speaking to a supervisor on the THIRD DAY for someone to admit they were wrong and manually file the claim. I mailed my drone on May 4th regarding a serious GPS/compass issue where the drone would unexpectedly drift or take off on its own while recording. Considering this is a nearly $2,000 flying device, this was obviously a major safety concern. Then things somehow got worse. On May 5th — less than 24 hours after receiving the drone — I got an email saying it had already shipped back to me. No repair details. No explanation. Nothing. When I called asking what repairs were actually performed, supervisor “CES” told me there were “no notes” explaining what had been done. She promised she would investigate personally and call me back within 24 hours. She never called back. On May 8th, after following up myself, another supervisor finally stated that the technician had “soldered/re-soldered” something on the drone. No explanation of WHAT was soldered. No detailed repair notes. No documentation. Nothing. This is a drone that had ZERO physical damage and had NEVER been crashed. I asked for written documentation of the repairs and was refused. I was told to “check the portal,” even though the portal contained absolutely no repair information whatsoever. Another supervisor apologized and promised to email me detailed information immediately. That never happened either. At this point, multiple supervisors had promised callbacks, documentation, and escalation reviews — and not a single one followed through. The drone arrived back while I was still on the phone with Asurion. I powered it on and immediately received compass calibration errors. The drone would not properly calibrate. So after all this, the drone STILL had issues. Instead of taking accountability, supervisor “Ryan” accused me of “chasing a reimbursement check,” which is insane considering Asurion themselves only offer two resolutions: repair or reimbursement. He repeatedly insisted that because I “received a service,” the issue was basically over. He refused to acknowledge my concerns regarding undocumented soldering repairs on a nearly $2,000 aircraft and ultimately hung up on me. Since then, the situation has only become more absurd. Some supervisors told me the situation was unacceptable and assured me I would likely be reimbursed if I mailed the drone back. Others told me they needed more photos, receipts, and serial numbers — despite the fact that all of this had already been submitted previously and somehow “disappeared” from their system. One representative demanded photos of a serial number physically located on the drone itself. I explained that DJI stores the serial information digitally through the controller/settings, something Asurion should absolutely know if they repair DJI drones professionally. That representative then refused to help me further and hung up. 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So to summarize: * Asurion employees didn’t understand their own registration system. * I was repeatedly hung up on and transferred around. * Multiple supervisors promised callbacks and never followed through. * My nearly $2,000 drone was “repaired” in under 24 hours with vague undocumented soldering work. * Nobody can tell me exactly what was repaired. * The drone still had calibration issues immediately after return. * Supervisors contradicted each other constantly. * Previously submitted documents mysteriously disappeared. * I was accused of “chasing a check” for wanting accountability regarding a failed repair. * I still don’t know whether they plan to repair, reimburse, or do nothing. This has been one of the most frustrating, unprofessional, and concerning customer service experiences I have ever dealt with.
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Reviewed in the United States on January 13, 2026
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Mike 77373
Grantham, US
★★★★★ 5
Love it.
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I bought this because it works great with my DeWalt battery. My driveway was overgrown and it locked up a couple of times which I'm assuming is a safety feature. Once I got the driveway cleaned up it works just fine.
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Reviewed in the United States on April 25, 2026
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J. Owens
Dallas, US
★★★★★ 5
My favorite E edger so far.
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For a battery powered unit, it was much better than I expected. Powerful enough to do everything in my yard. It beats even some of my previous good gas ones. I did my whole large front yard with a little more than one battery. Pretty good, actually.
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Reviewed in the United States on April 5, 2026
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Gregory M. Spitzer
Birmingham, US
★★★★★ 4
Does a good job, and works pretty well. Took weeks to have it delivered.
Works pretty well, seems to be slightly underpowered. I think it would work better if the soil here were drier. The shroud around the blade would probably not jam up with dirt if the soil here is drier. I was constantly having to remove the battery and using a screwdriver to remove the dirt from the shroud. The shroud would work better if it was larger. There is an adjuster that lowers a metal guide that fits up against the concrete that helps you to keep the blade right up to the edge, make sure to lower that guide into place. The 20 Volt Max batteries I used are hard to insert and remove, but mine are aftermarket batteries, and another tool I own is also hard to insert and remove the same batteries.
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Reviewed in the United States on June 18, 2025
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Duane Broussard
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★★★★★ 1
3 SCORE 18 Duane Broussard
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