i’ll send links! the shelving unit i’ve been using is a steel one, it was $53 when i purchased. & the pvc cover came with another plastic shelving unit that was $50 total. i originally planned to ditch my steel shelving unit, for the new set but the set was really cheap feeling. the shelving unit was unstable & could not hold a lot of weight.
so i took the pvc plastic cover off of the set, and put it on my old steel shelving unit. the shelf did not come with the plastic, & the plastic just barely fits on this shelf. i had to stretch it & shimmy it on, & there’s a lot of leftover plastic on the top. i couldnt find another plastic cover with the exact dimensions i needed, so this will have to do.
10/10 steel shelving unit & here is the set, cover with plastic shelving unit from amazon.
i’ll edit this comment in a second with more pictures of my set up so you can see what i was talking about, how it doesn’t fit perfectly.
Absolutely. I have two rooted and established props that are in soil. One of them is shrouded in peperomia prostrata, pay no attention to that lol.
https://cloudup.com/c5yfgpiwVeL
They were all cut from offshoots since my atabapoense has no real “top” just a ton of vines.
Don’t mind the color of the shots, they’re under grow lights! The undersides of adolescent leaves on atabapoense are a deep purple. It’s gorgeous. Leaves get up to 2—3 feet as you can see in the photos!
Is philodendron atabapoense or wend imbe something you’d be interested in? I’ve got some fresh props with roots coming out! Here are some photos of props and the momma plants: https://cloudup.com/c5Wm4BZlYXQ
Heat packs do help in certain cases. Many people use this one because it has a lower and slower temperature spike, which basically helps make sure that your plant doesn't cook in the box while in transit. However – can someone verify the following? I've heard it a couple times but I'm not experienced in shipping with heat packs – I'm pretty sure heat packs don't work/are rendered useless when the outside temperature is below freezing, so always remind your buyers to be cognizant of their local temperature.