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Posts posted by hostilis
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Looks PC to me.
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Turbinicarpus pseudomacrochele is my best guess.
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Mutant, that looks like a typical cereus peruvianus monstrose rather than an echinopsis to me. Is that a brevispinolosus in the foreground of that bridgesii picture?
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Have you grown any out incognito?
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I've seen photos of crested pereskiopsis before. I actually posted a thread about it a while back. I wouldn't pay that much for the thing, but I'm betting it'll go up to like 200 euro. Lol.
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typically of australia, we let our wealth rot as we tend to think the only way to make money is to destroy our rich land for coal/gas. not a smart country at all..
Sounds like the US. And every other major world power.
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Pilosocereus it is... now that you mention it.
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Looks kinda cereus-ish. I'm sure that didn't help, but that's my 2 cents.
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That possum must have had a nice time. Sorry for your loss, but I think they'll survive. Just do what Philocacti said.
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What's the benefit of grafting trich seedlings to trich seedlings when they're so close together in age?
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My grafted plants flower like mad. Way more than my own roots ones since they flower all year round.
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The psicho0 x rosei#1 mons
..caught my interest having three cotyledons/little horns/,instead of two as a very young seedling..
Did you graft slightly smaller seedlings to slightly larger seedlings there?
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Just saw this... amazing!!
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Beautiful! That is definitely a name-worthy clone!
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Really? So does this mean when a plant pollinates itself (like an L. williamsii) they aren't clones but genetically different seedlings?
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I'm not sure what it is. Could be bacterial or fungal maybe. Doesn't seem like typical coloration or patterning of a variegate to me though.
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It doesn't look variegated to me. Nutrient deficiency?
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I don't have issues with them not taking, but sometimes I have issues with these species taking then stalling. Astrophytum asterias and A. caput-medusae.
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I degrafted a Lophophora alberto and it rooted in 2 months.
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Mutant. I think that would work very well. But does anyone have a scop mother hybrid of flowering age?
mysubtleascention. That would create clones which kind of defeats the purpose imo.
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Uncut penis...
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Well it's good to know that you can get spineless scop looking plants from the scop mother hybrids. What I'm looking for is the round ribs, skin color, small spines, and possibly the "belly button" areoles in some seed grown plants! Seems like a lot of people already have seedligns like this. Lol.
And by the way, I overwinter all my cacti inside. It kinda sucks, but it works. Better than them turning into mush like they would in my crazy harsh, cold, wet winters.
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aren't all scops spineless? am i missing something in the title of this thread?
Even the "spineless" scops have spines like Auxin said, but there are lots of "scopulicola" cuttings going around that have spines the size of PC pachanoi. Most sellers in the US with "scopulicola" have spined clones. I had a TON of trouble finding the (virtually) spineless variety. I personally don't like to consider the longer spined ones scop, but some people do. Anyways that's why I want this project to succeed. So that there are lots more spineless clones floating around.
People in Australia probably don't understand the plight to find spineless scops since they're at every big box store over there. Lol.
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Show off your freaks
in Cacti & Succulents
Posted · Edited by hostilis
Definitely not "Ming Thing" And I've seen lots of Cereus peruvianus monstrose that look just like that. Maybe not the typical columnar one, but the typical one Atlman's sells, I think it's sometimes called "Cereus peruvianus monstrose cv Mini" Except yours is variegated.
http://cactus-bg.com/blog/kaktusi/cereus-peruvianus-f-monstrosa-i-tsereus-peruvianus-monstroza-225/