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The Corroboree

Evil Genius

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Everything posted by Evil Genius

  1. Evil Genius

    Trichocereus or cereus?

    It´s definitely not a cereus. It looks a bit roughed up and that affects how it looks like, but it´s probably Trichocereus peruvianus or something close to it. Pretty sure this will turn out to be a nice Trichocereus once you have it repotted and in full sun.
  2. Evil Genius

    Getting into cactuses

    Yeah, there is an endless wave of amazing stuff available right now and I wouldn´t be able to pick. It´s a great time to be a cactus grower and I am sure you´ll find some truly amazing clones in the community. The SAB webshop has a lot of good plants and there´s also lots of choice seed sellers that have some incredible crosses available right now. It´s a great hobby.
  3. Evil Genius

    socket passed away

    Hey mate, I am very sorry. I am sure Socket had a great and fulfilled cat life. My condolences.
  4. Evil Genius

    Peruvianus long spines or Cuzco ?

    Yeah, that one definitely belongs to the Trichocereus cuzcoensis complex. Trichocereus cuzcoensis is described as from Cuzco and with more ribs, but these kinds of plants grow in Central Peru and belong to that species as well. They are something like intermediates between Trichocereus cuzcoensis and Trichocereus tarmaensis/knuthianus. The latter two belong to Trichocereus cuzcoensis in a wider sense as well. If it was labeled Peruvianus it could be from Knize.
  5. Evil Genius

    Cactus seedling problem

    They look totally normal to me. There´s a slight reaction to sun light but that´s normal.
  6. Evil Genius

    Trichocereus What?

    No, it's a Trichocereus uyupampensis. A close relative of Trichocereus cuzcoensis.
  7. Evil Genius

    Bridgesii or not?

    yes, semi monstrose Trichocereus bridgesii.
  8. Evil Genius

    Lophophora: sunburn or mites?

    sulfur is usually not 100% effective against mites. You need something more effective like Neem, White Oil, imidacloprid or Spinosad. Also, Diat. Earth might work also. It's cancerogen when inhaled though.
  9. Evil Genius

    Id trich?

    Yes, should definitely work. Some Ferocactus species are great stock and Melocactus might work too.
  10. Evil Genius

    Id trich?

    Hey Fluss, this is a Melocactus or a Ferocactus. Leaning towards a Melocactus but at that size it´s too early to tell. They way it pups rules out all Andean giants like Trichocereus terscheckii and the only Trichocereus that´s remotely similar is Trichocereus candicans...and that one just looks different too. This is a very common Trichocereus-Doppelgänger.
  11. Evil Genius

    Unknown Hybrids

    Depends on how many crosses these were raised from. Normally, you´d write the parents of the cross on the label and assign a number for every seedling grown from that cross, eg Trichocereus pachanoi x Trichocereus bridgesii "Psycho0"-1, Trichocereus pachanoi x Trichocereus bridgesii "Psycho0"-2 and so on. If this is a mix of various hybrids where the labels are lost you could just assign one name to the collection, eg Unknown Hybrids Collection-1, Unknown Hybrids Collection-2 etc. Personally, I feel like it´s extremely important to keep track of the parents of a cross and these days I try very hard not to lose any labels. It still happens every now and then to me too. But yeah, I feel like you got a mix here and when you assign one name to all it´s kinda problematic because the plants will eventually vary greatly. It would take close inspections of every single plant to guess the parents and in most cases it doesnt work anyways. Some parents are not visible in the body, which is why you often don´t even see a recessive father for example. In such cases, Hybrids can look like a botanically pure species and that happens quite a lot.
  12. Evil Genius

    Lophophora: sunburn or mites?

    That´s spider mites. You need a miticide or something like Neem.
  13. Evil Genius

    Cactus help!

    What soil are you using below that covering layer? I like covering layers, but the problem with them is that the soil can look completely dry on the surface, but below it´s a swamp and you wouldn´t even notice. I´ve seen plants that looked dry as a desert, but the topping layer kinda trapped the water and that´s a problem if the soil is too organic. If I were you I´d probably look into a good potting mix made of Lava, Pumice and Coir and ditch the topping layer.
  14. Evil Genius

    Is This Asbestos?

    I have a lot of experience with Asbestos and spotting objects that contain Asbestos. I would treat this object as potentially containing Asbestos. It looks a lot like it and I am pretty sure it is Asbestos. It´s typical for the Asbestos plates that were used as fire protection. But yeah, you would need to get a lab to confirm it. Best call a professional company and have them pick it up.
  15. Evil Genius

    TBM Flowering

    I think this was a prank by Zelly. It´s not photoshopped, but glued or the flowers are stuck on the areoles. Pretty good job actually.
  16. Evil Genius

    Please ID :)

    Hey mate, there probably is a Trichocereus pachanoi somewhere under all that scale. You should definitely get it treated though. It´s really covered with a Pest called scale. You can usually treat it pretty easily, but it takes a few treatments with something like Neem or Alcohol (no treatment in the sun!). So yeah, I´d suggest you post it again after it´s clean. It´s probably T. pachanoi, but it could also be a short spine Bridgesii.
  17. Evil Genius

    ECHINOCEREUS ????

    That´s a Trichocereus schickendantzii. There are various forms that were included in this species now and this one gets a little bit bigger as some others. Still the same species though.
  18. Evil Genius

    Bridgesii ID (2)

    Hey mate, yeah, looks like very typical Trichocereus bridgesii. Probably seed grown. it´s very difficult to ID them because most were grown from botanical seeds. The left one looks a lot like KK919 from La Paz. Right one might belong there too. It´s one of the most common Bridgesii strains on the market,
  19. Evil Genius

    ID help please?

    The flower looks more like Gymnocalycium. The photo isnt great, but I am pretty sure it can only be a Gymno with that flower bud.
  20. Evil Genius

    Two T. peruvianus?

    Hi Floyd, the first one is a very spiny Pachanoi relative that belongs into the T. pallarensis/santaensis complex. These are often posted because they are difficult to ID. Check out a similar one. The 2-3 long spine spination is extremely typical. Not sure about the second one as it´s still a relatively short cutting. Could be something similar, but you need to post it again in a year or two. It´s not a Trichocereus cuzcoensis. Rather Peruvianus or maybe Schoenii. Give it some time. PS: I had to remove the parts of your post that were discussing activity. It´s not allowed here. Thanks for understanding.
  21. Evil Genius

    What species would you say this is?

    Hey mate, it´s still a relatively small plant so take it with a grain of salt but on the first look I´d say it could be a plant from the group of plants surrounding Trichocereus pallarensis. Pallarensis is something in between very spiny Pachanoi and Trichocereus peruvianus and these 3-4 spine areoles are very typical. Very interesting plants. Check out these here.
  22. Hey mate, they look lovely. The Huarazensis x Zelly cross is one of the best ones I´ve seen this year. Can´t wait to see how mine will come out. The scop x Terscheckii have a lot of potential too. About the purple color. This kind of discoloration is usually a temporary reaction to the environment, eg when they are stressed, when they get a lot of sun or from a lamp, from the cold etc. It´s usually not permanent. That said, there are a few mutants with reddish skin color so I´ll keep my fingers crossed that it stays.
  23. Can´t comment on that because there´s no discussion of potency allowed here. But yeah, very nice plant. With these spines it can only be something like T. santaensis or a short spine Peruvianus. I strongly lean towards Santa.
  24. Yeah, that´s pretty much what I am saying. The species Trichocereus pachanoi can be glaucous, but plants that are THIS glaucous often belong to Trichocereus santaensis. It´s not an important difference because I consider Trichocereus santaensis to be very close to Trichocereus pachanoi, but if your plant really belongs into that complex then it´s much rarer than normal versions of T. pachanoi. The glaucousness is written down as trait in the description of Trichocereus santaensis and the degree of glaucousness changes from plant to plant, and from population to population. Have a look at this plant and compare it to yours. It´s almost an exact match. What makes me so sure is the shape of the areoles and these clunky ribs. You don´t see that very often.
  25. With the color of the epidermis and the bulky look there´s a very high chance that this belongs to the Santa Valley complex. In particular, this reminds me of the plants you see from Ichoca or Chancha.
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