Showing posts with label cactuscultivation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cactuscultivation. Show all posts

Sunday, December 27, 2020

Coryphantha maiz-tablasensis in flower

 

    It may seem difficult to grow it, but it surely is easy to get it to flower in my growing set-up. I use a largely mineral soil-mix, comprising granite, some clay-ish calcarous stone chippings, large diameter river gravel, some sand, perlite and 5 to 10% wormcastings. Except for the perlite, everything is sort of DIY, as I never buy materials but prefer to collect it myself while visiting various places in the (nearby) mountains and hills.    
    Mature plants are kept outside, in full sun, with no shade and are subject to intense heat during the entire summer months. I give them rain water once per week or two times a month, depending on the heat and humidity. During the winter they are kept without water in a cool dry room. It is normal for them to shrivel and loose body volume in this period. The watering only resumes when outside temps exceed 18 degrees Celsius. I rarely feed them nutrients. If so, they should be poor in Nitrogen and applied in small doses at the beginning of the season, after the first waterings.



Thursday, January 17, 2019

Mammillaria longimamma

Mammillaria longimamma aka Dolichothele longimamma flowering and unhappy 'bout its Lebensraum.
Easy plant to grow and reproduce. It loves just about any fast draining growing medium and flowers profusely after a bit of winter cold. In fact, given the right conditions, it produces so many offshoots it fills a medium pot in only one growing season. So plant it in shallow pots and do not exaggerate with either nutrients or waterings in order to keep it close to its natural form.

Monday, January 14, 2019

Echinocereus viridiflorus v. cylindricus, SB 378, Brewster County, Texas, USA

Echinocereus viridiflorus v. cylindricus, with field number SB 378, collected by Steve Brack in Brewster County, Texas, USA. If planted in a fast draining soil and kept rather dry during humid or rather cold nights (less than 10℃), it should present no significant problems in cultivation. Ventilation and a cold rest period during the winter months are also necessary.

Thursday, January 10, 2019

Echinocactus grusonii, GM 1216

I like to keep track of the plants I am growing. Knowing the exact species denominations and the original habitat of of your plants is essential in the attempt to keep them alive and happy.
This one is a seedling of Echinocactus grusonii I bought two years ago and slowly acclimatized to thrive outdoor. The long spines are an adaptation to the large quantities of UV it received during the summer. In the dry and cold rest periods, it turns a bit purple.
Field number : GM 1216
Collector : Grzegorz Matuszewski
Locality : Mexicó : Zacatecas (San Juan Capistrano, 1100 m)
I encourage you all to buy only cacti with a field number attached. You'll not only know the name of your plant, but also the specific climate where it came to evolve for so many thousands years.

Notocactus scopa

Notocactus scopa is the first cactus I bought and grew successfully. It is an appropriate cactus for beginners as it tolerates well a lot of inherent mistakes of an enthusiast cactus rookie grower.
For three years, I had it in almost pure coco choir soil mix with some perlite, sand and wormcompost additions and it still managed to survive and flower. It seems to like bright light, but will tolerate indirect sunlight or even some shadow during the hot summer afternoons. A winter rest at a minimum of 5-7℃ will encourage the plant to flower in the next season. Watering and fertilization should be rather infrequent. My neglect in these matters probably kept it alive for so long.
I do not know if this plant is frost resistant. This winter it is resting at negative temperatures - for relatively short periods. So I'll have the answer the next spring.
Update: I should mention these photos are from 2014. The very last one is from 2017.

 

Sunday, January 6, 2019

Frailea asterioides var. harmoniana, KH 604

Fraileas are relatively easy to grow cacti. They need a porous, fast draining soil and enjoy quite frequent waterings during the growing season. When temperature drops, keep dry and at positive Celsius temperatures.
This particular specimen was collected in 1998 by Bruno Knutti and Christian Hefti in a locality North-West of Mario Rubio, on Ruta 31, Salto Uruguay. I grew it hard, outdoors, with lots of sun and hot temperatures during summer, and it could probably tolerate some frost during the rest season. However, I keep it at around 10 degrees Celsius, completely dry.

Tuesday, November 20, 2018

Lophophora fricii

Lophophora fricii - here in flower - is relatively easy to grow. It prefers a slightly basic soil with almost mineral content but it may accommodate, as in this case, some worm compost and even coco coir. Say 20% of the total soil mix. Another addition was perlite... too bad it tends to rise up at the surface when watering is done from above.
By the way, watering is sparse. Say twice a month when the weather is fine - that is over 28 degrees Celsius - and no high atmospheric humidity is encountered. Too much water will make it burst. It can take quite a lot of sun and cold if grown hard.
My understanding of the concept of hard growing will be explained later on.