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Description
albo philodendron price Alocasia baginda 'Dragon Scale' Albo-Variegata – Foliage FactoryAlocasia baginda 'Dragon Scale' Albo Variegata Alocasia baginda 'Dragon Scale' Albo Variegata brings white, cream and pale green variegation onto the thick raised leaves of Dragon Scale. The plant keeps the compact rhizome growth and shield like blade shape of Alocasia baginda, while the pale pattern brightens the raised green surface. Each leaf is individual, with marbling, streaking, speckling or broader cream white sections appearing in different
Alocasia baginda 'Dragon Scale' Albo-Variegata
Alocasia baginda 'Dragon Scale' Albo-Variegata brings white, cream and pale green variegation onto the thick raised leaves of Dragon Scale. The plant keeps the compact rhizome growth and shield-like blade shape of Alocasia baginda, while the pale pattern brightens the raised green surface. Each leaf is individual, with marbling, streaking, speckling or broader cream-white sections appearing in different combinations across the plant.
The underlying species is naturally small. In botanical material, Alocasia baginda reaches around 25–30 cm tall, with blades around 10–18 cm long and 7–12 cm wide. Cultivated variegated plants can vary in size and pattern, especially when young, recently moved or grown under different nursery conditions. A stable plant carries both bright variegation and enough green tissue for steady leaf production.
White pattern over Dragon Scale texture
Alocasia baginda 'Dragon Scale' Albo-Variegata has pale patterning across the raised Dragon Scale leaf relief. The leaves are thick, peltate and bullate, with raised panels divided by strong veins. Pale tissue sits across that sculpted surface, so the pattern follows the relief of the blade surface. Cream areas can appear warm ivory on young leaves and clearer white as the blade hardens, while green areas keep the plant vigorous.
New leaves often open soft and slightly translucent before they firm up. During this phase, the colour may look muted or uneven. Once the blade matures, the raised texture becomes clearer and the variegation settles into stronger contrast. Very pale leaves show high contrast, while mixed leaves with green, cream and white give the base more working tissue over time.
- Variegation: white, cream and pale green over a darker Dragon Scale base.
- Leaf form: thick shield-like blades on upright petioles.
- Surface detail: raised bullate panels with strong vein definition.
- Pattern range: marbling, streaks, speckles and broader pale sections.
- Growth shape: compact habit from a short rhizome.
Baginda origin and indoor growth
Alocasia baginda is a Bornean species from Kalimantan in the Araceae family. It grows in wet tropical conditions and has a compact terrestrial habit with a short rhizome. Those traits shape its indoor growing needs: the plant wants warmth and moisture, and the roots need air through the mix after each watering. A cold, dense or oversized pot can slow the base quickly.
Alocasia baginda 'Dragon Scale' Albo-Variegata grows more slowly than many fully green foliage plants because some parts of the leaf contain less chlorophyll. A plant may pause after transport or repotting while the roots adjust, then resume with a greener or more balanced leaf. This variation belongs to the variegated leaf pattern. Firm roots, balanced leaves and a steady mix of green and pale tissue show the plant is stable.
Showing pale Dragon Scale leaves
Place this form where the white pattern and raised texture can be seen close up. A shelf with bright window light screened from harsh sun, a warm cabinet, a vitrine or a plant stand away from cold glass all match its compact habit. Pale tissue marks more easily than green tissue, so sudden exposure to strong sun, rough handling or mineral residue on the leaves can show quickly.
Beside dark Alocasia baginda 'Dragon Scale', this Albo-Variegata form appears brighter and more contrasted. The darker Dragon Scale emphasizes green texture and deeper veins; Albo-Variegata adds cream-white pattern across the same compact leaf structure. Together, the two forms show different expressions of the same raised Dragon Scale surface.
Albo care on textured foliage
- Light: Give clear indirect light or gentle filtered morning sun. Brightness keeps new leaves moving and the pattern visible, while harsh direct sun can scorch pale tissue.
- Watering: Water when the upper third of the mix has dried, then let the pot drain fully. In cooler months, give the lower mix extra time to lose its wet feel.
- Substrate: Use a chunky aroid mix with bark, coarse mineral particles and a moisture-retentive base. The rhizome needs moisture after watering and air around the root zone.
- Humidity: Keep the air steadily humid, roughly in the 60–80% range where possible. Higher humidity helps new leaves expand cleanly and reduces crisping on delicate pale sections.
- Temperature: Keep pot and root zone warm; the biggest winter risk is cold wet substrate after watering.
- Feeding: Use diluted fertiliser during active leaf production. Strong fertiliser doses can leave mineral residue that marks pale tissue sooner.
- Handling: Let new leaves harden before heavy cleaning or rearranging. Fresh pale areas bruise more easily than mature green tissue.
- Mineral substrates: This plant can adapt to inert mineral or semi-hydro substrates with a careful transition, steady warmth and balanced nutrition.
Seasonal pace and leaf balance
Alocasia baginda 'Dragon Scale' Albo-Variegata often slows in darker months. It may hold the same leaves for longer, pause between new leaves or shed an older blade while the rhizome stays firm. During this phase, reduce watering frequency according to how slowly the pot dries. Heavy feeding during a winter pause can add salts while growth remains slow.
The variegation may shift from leaf to leaf. A greener leaf can help rebuild energy after stress, while a paler leaf adds stronger contrast. Bright, gentle light keeps new leaves steadier and the pattern easier to see; the variegated tissue itself comes from the plant’s existing pattern. Indoors, aim for firm roots, balanced leaves and light soft enough for pale tissue.
Pale-tissue marks from root trouble
- Brown marks on white areas: Check for direct sun, dry air, leaf bruising, hard-water residue or fertiliser build-up. White tissue shows stress early.
- Yellowing with a heavy pot: The mix may be holding water too long. Inspect the roots and increase air through the substrate.
- Small new leaves: Recent transport, root disturbance, low light or cool conditions can reduce leaf size for one growth cycle.
- Crisp margins: Review humidity, watering consistency and mineral residue. Pale edges often mark before the rest of the blade.
- Soft rhizome tissue: Remove the plant from the pot and check the base. Firm sections can be restarted in a cleaner, airier mix.
- Mite and thrips damage: Mites and thrips can sit along the veins and petiole bases. Inspect both sides of the leaves regularly.
Corm growth and offsets
Keep healthy leaves even when the pattern is uneven, because each functioning blade feeds the base. Remove fully yellowed or collapsed leaves at the base with clean tools. Clean mature leaves gently with a soft damp cloth and avoid rubbing fresh leaves before the tissue has firmed.
Propagation is by division, offsets or corms while the plant is actively growing. Small pieces need warmth, a modest pot and an open substrate. Mature plants may produce the typical Alocasia spathe and spadix, though flowering is secondary to the variegated textured leaves indoors.
A protected spot for albo foliage
Alocasia baginda 'Dragon Scale' Albo-Variegata contains insoluble calcium oxalate crystals. Place it away from pets and small children that may chew leaves. Sap may irritate skin, so gloves are sensible during pruning, repotting or division.
White patterning on Dragon Scale
Alocasia baginda Kurniawan & P.C.Boyce was published in 2011 in the Araceae family. In Indonesian usage, baginda is an honorific associated with royal address.
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