Anthurium 'Goliath' × 'Bloodqueen': Advanced velvet Anthurium that needs very stable warmth, high humidity, airy roots and careful watering to avoid leaf-edge decline.
Best light for Anthurium 'Goliath' × 'Bloodqueen'
Bright indirect light is best; avoid harsh direct sun on velvet leaves, but do not keep it in deep shade.
How to water Anthurium 'Goliath' × 'Bloodqueen'
Water when the top 2-4cm of mix dries; keep lightly moist in active growth while preserving excellent root aeration.
Humidity for Anthurium 'Goliath' × 'Bloodqueen'
High, stable humidity is strongly preferred; aim for 60-80% with gentle airflow.
Pet safety
Toxic to cats and dogs if chewed; Anthurium types are treated as calcium-oxalate aroids and should be kept away from pets and children.
Quick care
The essentials at a glance.
Light
Bright indirect light is best; avoid harsh direct sun on velvet leaves, but do not keep it in deep shade.
Watering
Water when the top 2-4cm of mix dries; keep lightly moist in active growth while preserving excellent root aeration.
Humidity
High, stable humidity is strongly preferred; aim for 60-80% with gentle airflow.
Temperature
Warm, stable conditions are best at 18-27C; avoid cold draughts and prolonged drops below 16C.
Soil
Moisture-buffered chunky collector-Anthurium mix for Anthurium 'Goliath Bloodqueen', with bark and mineral aeration balanced by coir/bark fines for stable growth.
Feeding
Feed little and often in active growth with dilute balanced feed; reduce in low light or winter.
Plant overview
Core profile details and growing behaviour.
Origin
Horticultural Anthurium hybrid/cross sold as Anthurium 'Goliath' × 'Bloodqueen'; not a wild species and not assigned a single natural range.
Growth habit
Collector velvet-leaf Anthurium with clumping to short-climbing growth
Growth speed
Moderate
Mature size
35-120cm tall x 35-100cm wide indoors depending on parentage and maturity
Seasonal notes
Best growth usually comes in warm, bright months. In winter, protect from cold windows and reduce watering only as drying slows.
What to avoid
Avoid humidity crashes, cold wet compost, heavy potting mixes, direct sun on velvet leaves and repeated drought-to-saturation swings.
Detailed care
Long-form guidance from the linked care profile.
Light guide
Bright indirect light. Protect from harsh midday sun and avoid very dim corners.
Watering guide
Water when the top part of the mix has dried slightly. Keep moisture even but never leave roots sitting wet for long periods.
Humidity guide
Moderate to high humidity is helpful, especially for thinner or more collector-type foliage.
Temperature guide
Keep warm and stable, ideally around 18-28 C, and avoid cold drafts or sudden drops.
Feeding guide
Feed lightly during active growth every 2-4 weeks with a balanced fertiliser at reduced strength.
Soil guide
Use a very airy mix that keeps roots oxygenated while still matching the plant's moisture needs.
Repotting guide
Repot when roots fill the pot or the mix starts to break down, choosing an airy medium and only a modest pot size increase.
Propagation guide
Usually propagated by division, cuttings, or offsets depending on the plant type.
Pet safety guide
Check the exact plant before treating it as pet safe. Many houseplants are irritating or toxic if chewed, while some are considered safer.
Unboxing advice
Unpack Anthurium Goliath x Bloodqueen promptly, check for transit stress, and place it in suitable light before making major changes.
First week care
Keep conditions stable in the first week, avoid unnecessary repotting, and water only according to the plant's normal needs.
Shipping stress
Judge recovery from new stable growth rather than a single stressed older leaf, frond, or stem after transit.
Soil and potting
Use the soil structure that matches this plant’s roots and moisture needs.
Root aeration
5/5
Water retention
3/5
Drainage
5/5
Nutrient demand
3/5
Organic matter
4/5
Recommended soil recipe
25% orchid bark, 20% composted bark fines, 20% coco coir, 15% perlite, 10% pumice, 5% tree fern fibre or coco chips, 3% activated charcoal, 2% worm castings.
Why this mix works
Anthurium 'Goliath Bloodqueen' is a robust collector or complex hybrid Anthurium, so the mix must keep thick roots breathing while still providing enough moisture to prevent stalled leaves.
Ingredient alternatives
Increase bark and pumice for cooler rooms; increase coir only if the plant is warm, bright and drying too fast.
Repotting mix adjustments
Repot gently, preserving healthy thick roots, and do not compact the mix around the stem base.
Winter mix adjustments
Keep the root zone warm and reduce watering frequency when light drops.
Young plant mix notes
For young plants, use bark fines rather than large bark chunks, while keeping perlite and pumice present.
Flowering and FAQ
What to expect from blooms and the most common flowering questions.
Flower type
Aroid spathe and spadix
Flower colour
Usually greenish, cream, pale yellow or muted; collector foliage forms are not normally grown for bright spathe colour.
Flower scent
None or very slight; these Anthuriums are not normally grown for fragrance.
Flowering season
Most likely during active growth in spring or summer, though indoor timing can be irregular.
Flowering frequency
Occasional and strongly dependent on maturity, light, warmth, humidity and root stability.
Flower longevity
Short to moderate; it may last several weeks but is usually less important than healthy foliage.
Flowering overview
Anthurium 'Goliath Bloodqueen' may flower once mature, but it is mainly a foliage Anthurium. The bloom is the typical Anthurium structure: a spathe with a spadix, often subtle compared with the leaves.
Flower form description
A narrow or sheath-like spathe subtending a spike-like spadix. The visible structure is an inflorescence rather than a petalled flower.
Encouraging flowering
Encourage flowering on Anthurium 'Goliath Bloodqueen' by growing the plant to maturity first: bright indirect light, warm nights, steady humidity, airy roots and light regular feeding in active growth. Do not push fertiliser if roots are stressed.
Flower removal advice
Leave a healthy inflorescence on Anthurium 'Goliath Bloodqueen' if you want to observe it, or cut it off near the base once it fades. On a small, newly imported or recovering plant, removing a bloom can help redirect energy back to leaves and roots.
Flower energy impact
Flowering can draw some energy from Anthurium 'Goliath Bloodqueen', especially if the plant is small, recently repotted or rebuilding roots. A strong established plant can usually carry a bloom without trouble.
Flowering myths
The spathe on Anthurium 'Goliath Bloodqueen' is often mistaken for the flower. In Anthurium, the true flowers are tiny and sit on the spadix; extra fertiliser will not fix poor light, cold roots or unstable watering.
Pollination notes
Pollination is only needed for seed work or breeding. Anthurium flowers on the spadix pass through receptive and pollen stages, so successful hand-pollination usually needs compatible pollen at the right time.
Leaf ID and plant story
Use these visual notes to recognise the plant and understand what makes it distinctive.
Leaf shape
elongated cordate to spade-shaped velvet leaves with a deep sinus and tapering point.
Leaf texture
soft velvet to satin-matte, often darker and less glossy than flowering Anthuriums.
Leaf colour
inky dark green to near-black velvet with pale veins and possible red/bronze emergent tones.
Leaf pattern
No variegation expected unless named; silver venation, bullation or pale spathes are not leaf variegation.
Growth form
Collector velvet-leaf Anthurium with clumping to short-climbing growth
Native range
Cultivated selection/hybrid unless a true species record; Anthurium papillilaminum is associated with lowland Panama, but hybrids need label-specific parentage.
Habitat type
Tropical aroid; Anthurium are evergreen Araceae with petiolate leaves and spadix/spathe inflorescences, often epiphytic, hemiepiphytic or terrestrial depending on species.
Story summary
Anthurium 'Goliath Bloodqueen' belongs in the dark velvet collector Anthurium group, with ID focused on elongated heart/spade leaves, deep colour and pale vein contrast.
Easy ID tip
Use the long spade-like velvet blade, dark colour, sinus depth and labelled cross; seedlings should not be ID’d from one juvenile leaf.
Often confused with
Often confused with Ace of Spades, papillilaminum seedlings, dark crystallinum hybrids and Doc Block dark velvet lines.
Common problems for this plant
Open the resolver or jump into a guide for issues this plant commonly faces.
Thrips
A fast-moving pest that causes silvering, streaking, scarring and black frass spotting on leaves and flowers.
Spider Mites
A common indoor mite pest that causes stippling, webbing and gradual plant weakening, especially in warm dry rooms.
Root Rot
A root-zone failure problem driven by persistent wet, oxygen-poor conditions and often associated with pathogenic root decay organisms.
Bacterial Leaf Spot
A water-spread bacterial disease that causes lesions, halos, water-soaked areas and tissue collapse on leaves.
Low Humidity Stress
Stress caused by air that is too dry for the plant’s needs, often worsening edge crisping and poor leaf finish.
Cold Damage
A chilling injury that causes water-soaked patches, blackening, collapse and delayed failure on tropical plants exposed to low temperatures.
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