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Description
ficus benjamina indoor plant Ficus benjamina 'Exotica'Ficus benjamina 'Exotica' Ficus benjamina 'Exotica' is a fine leaved weeping fig with light green foliage, narrow pointed leaves and a softly pendulous canopy. Its fresh leaf colour gives the plant an open, flowing appearance with a softer green canopy. This cultivar grows as a woody indoor shrub or small tree with slender branchlets that naturally bend as they lengthen. With time, it can form a graceful indoor canopy when it is kept in one stable
Ficus benjamina 'Exotica'
Ficus benjamina 'Exotica' is a fine-leaved weeping fig with light green foliage, narrow pointed leaves and a softly pendulous canopy. Its fresh leaf colour gives the plant an open, flowing appearance with a softer green canopy.
This cultivar grows as a woody indoor shrub or small tree with slender branchlets that naturally bend as they lengthen. With time, it can form a graceful indoor canopy when it is kept in one stable position and shaped with light pruning.
Light green leaves and arching branchlets
- Leaf colour: Light green leaves create a soft, fresh canopy.
- Branch habit: Pendulous branchlets give the plant its familiar weeping outline.
- Leaf texture: Slender leaves create a fine, mobile surface across the canopy.
- Plant form: It can mature from a leafy young plant into a clear indoor tree shape.
- Position: Consistent light, warmth and watering help the canopy stay evenly leafed.
Weeping fig growth in a finer-leaved form
Ficus benjamina 'Exotica' keeps the slender-pointed leaf shape of the species, and its lighter colour gives the canopy a delicate look. The leaves are carried on flexible woody shoots, and those shoots gradually arch downward as they extend. This is the feature behind the common name weeping fig.
In the wild, Ficus benjamina is a warm-climate tree of wet tropical habitats. Indoor plants stay much smaller, but their growth still reflects that origin: they prefer a warm root zone, good filtered light, and regular moisture followed by slight drying. After acclimation, 'Exotica' usually holds its canopy more evenly when light, warmth and watering stay consistent.
Stable care for Ficus benjamina 'Exotica'
- Light: Place it in bright filtered light; very dim positions lead to thinner growth and easier leaf drop.
- Watering: Water when the upper quarter of the potting mix has dried, then empty any standing water from the cover pot.
- Potting mix: Use a free-draining substrate that still holds some moisture around the fine feeder roots.
- Temperature: Keep conditions steady, ideally above 16°C, with warmer active growth around 18–26°C.
- Air movement: Give gentle room airflow while avoiding cold draughts from doors, vents, or winter windows.
- Feeding: Apply a balanced houseplant fertiliser at reduced strength during active growth.
- Pruning: Shorten long, bare or uneven stems to encourage branching and keep the canopy balanced.
Leaf drop, pale shoots and crisp edges
- Many leaves dropping at once: Check whether the plant was moved, chilled, dried too far, overwatered, or shifted into lower light.
- Pale weak shoots: Increase filtered light and avoid heavy feeding until the plant is growing strongly again.
- Soft yellowing leaves: Inspect drainage and root moisture, especially in cool rooms or oversized pots.
- Crisp edges: Review watering gaps, very dry heated air, and direct hot sun through glass.
- Honeydew or bumps on stems: Look for scale insects and clean early before the canopy becomes difficult to inspect.
Latex sap and pet safety
When Ficus benjamina 'Exotica' is cut or damaged, it releases white latex sap that may irritate skin and eyes. Keep the plant away from pets that chew foliage, and clear fallen or pruned leaves from accessible areas. Gloves are sensible when shaping larger stems.
Name and botanical background
Ficus benjamina belongs to Moraceae and was formally published by Linnaeus in 1767. The genus name Ficus comes from the Latin name for fig, and the common name weeping fig reflects the species’ arching branchlets.
Fine green leaves sit on arching branchlets, with a canopy that stays light, open and softly pendulous.
Shipping Notes
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