Hoya 'Shooting Star'
Hoya 'Shooting Star'
Shooting Star (Hoya multiflora), also known as Wax Plant, Waxvine, or Porcelain Flower, is native to the tropical forests of Southeast Asia, particularly Thailand, Malaysia, and Indonesia. It grows in the lower canopy and along forest margins where moisture is constant, air is still, and sunlight filters in soft but steady intervals. Rains pass through quickly, leaving the air thick and luminous.
Unlike many of its vining relatives, Hoya multiflora grows upright, forming sturdy, branching stems lined with thick, glossy leaves of deep green. The foliage is firm yet pliant, storing moisture and maintaining structure even through drier periods. Mature plants are generous bloomers, producing large, recurrent clusters of narrow, star-shaped flowers that curve outward like shooting stars in motion. Their pale yellow and white tones glow softly under diffused light, releasing a delicate fragrance through the warm air.
In cultivation, Hoya multiflora thrives in bright, indirect light and appreciates consistent watering, though it endures brief dryness with little complaint. Upright and composed, it flowers readily year-round under stable conditions, rewarding even modest care with abundance.
Resilient, expressive, and luminous, it remains a cornerstone of any Hoya collection—a plant that defines presence through constancy and grace.
Varieties: Plants that are bred to deliver a range of interesting traits that affect sizes and colors are known as varieties.
Care Card +
- Persona
Keepers
- Light
Indirect
- Water
Twice a Month
- Difficulty
Easy
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