
Collectors are searching out specimens with intricate patterns in a dazzling array of reds, yellows and greens, and sharing their best on social media.
“It’s like looking at a painting,” collector Leiister Soon told AFP, admiring the broad-leaf caladium — elephant ear plants — at his Kuala Lumpur home.
“Taking care of plants meant that I can divert my attention — (it is) better than watching the number of Covid cases going up.”
The plants are known as “keladi” in the local Malay language, but the trend has grown to encompass other species, such as anthuriums — known as flamingo flower or laceleaf — and alocasias, whose varieties include the silver dragon.
Once relatively cheap, prices surged last year when lockdowns confined Malaysians to their homes, and many collectors started posting images of their favourite plants on social media.
While some still cost as little as RM20, the rarest can now fetch up to RM6,000 each.
Soon says he spent more than RM20,000 on plants in the past year alone.
“During the lockdown, people were at home thinking about how to beautify their homes,” nursery owner Daud Kasim told AFP in Sungai Besar, about 100km from here.
“They could look at these plants — and their stress would go away.”
An avid collector himself, Daud said he started selling keladi plants in late 2018 but demand exploded during the pandemic.
Nearly half of his nursery’s inventory is now made up of such plants, with foreign varieties from countries such as Thailand, China, the US and the Netherlands.
Standing among thousands of potted specimens, Daud said the trend was here to stay, even as authorities gradually begin lifting restrictions.
Health authorities have reported more than 300,000 infections and over 1,000 deaths so far.