Hoya Pubicalyx Splash
Description
✦ THE PLANTRY PLANT CO. ✦
"Do not be fooled by the Pubicalyx Splash's reputation as a beginner's hoya. Yes, she is forgiving — but give her good light and a little patience, and she rewards you with clusters of star-shaped flowers so deeply burgundy they read as near-black, each one crowned in pink. Few easy plants have such a dramatic second act." — Mr. Phileas Plant
The Plant
The Hoya pubicalyx 'Splash' — often called the Wax Plant — is a fast-growing, trailing hoya from the Philippines, named for the fine silver flecking scattered like spray across its waxy, lance-shaped leaves. It is among the most forgiving hoyas you can grow, and one of the most rewarding when it blooms: dense umbels of dark, star-shaped flowers with pink-tipped coronas.
This specimen is established in a clear nursery cup of Fluval Stratum, carrying eight thick, glossy leaves with pronounced silver splash on gently twisting young vines. The clear cup lets you see a healthy root system for yourself before it ever reaches your shelf. Train her up a trellis or let her trail from a shelf — either suits her. Care is genuinely low-fuss: she'd rather be forgotten than fussed over, and stores water in those succulent leaves to prove it.
Care at a Glance
☀️ Light: Bright, indirect. The brighter the light (short of harsh midday sun), the better the splash — and the likelier the blooms.
💧 Water: When the top inch of substrate is dry. She prefers to run dry over wet.
🌡️ Humidity: Content in average household air; appreciates a little extra.
🪴 Soil: Ships established in Fluval Stratum.
📏 Growth: Trailing or climbing — fast and vigorous with support or a hanging spot.
⚠️ Toxicity: Generally considered non-toxic and pet-friendly, though the milky sap may irritate sensitive skin.
What You'll Receive
The exact plant photographed — an eight-leaf Hoya pubicalyx 'Splash' established in a clear nursery cup of Fluval Stratum. Carefully packaged with weather-appropriate protection — heat pack included when temperatures require it.
Questions about this plant? We love talking plants — reach out anytime.