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The Corroboree

zelly

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Posts posted by zelly


  1. the sooner the trichs get into bigger pots the fatter & faster they grow..........

     

    the best way to learn is by experience.....plant one in a 4mm pot,another in a 10mm pot and 6 in a shallow 15cm pt.  leave the rest in the takeaway tub.  give all of them the same grow conditions, ferts etc.  take pic's monthly

     

    everyone's grow conditions are different, just as their experiences & opinions.......

    only by experimentation will you learn what works best for you

    • Like 4

  2. Pedropark  that is very interesting information.......I have crossed my cherry red grandi with six columnars now:

    red grandi x lumberjack, x peru2, x br bertha, x SS02xSS01, x arboricola  & x icaros.  I guess its time to plant the seeds & see what comes up.

     

    for x icaros, x lumberjack & x arboricola the mother grandi  was variegated

    • Like 4

  3. micromegas- every scop x grandi seedling plant has a different colored flower.  currently I have 7 that have flowered, each one different......

     

    Plus, i gave 1 to Lee, one to Eddie & 1 to George....each of theirs bloomed a different colored flower.....Michelle won one i auctioned on egay, hers was a different colored flower......Jeremy grew some from seed, his first to bloom was also a different colored flower... So 12 have flowered that I know of & I've 3 more seedlings with buds.....  12 for 12 is 100% colored flowers......

     

    see this link for high res pics on all known to date     http://misplant.net/Zellys.html

     

    F2 fruits are ripening now.......     :)  

     

    Here's one of a dozen or so......

    zelFruitsDSC_0853.thumb.jpg.1acca49d55948bf1f47be8ac425274fb.jpg

     

    As for storing pollen I place mine in small zip lock baggies on the top shelf of my refrigerator where they maintain a crisp 37F.  Its good for around 7 months, which is all i need.

    zelFruitsDSC_0853.thumb.jpg.1acca49d55948bf1f47be8ac425274fb.jpg

    zelFruitsDSC_0853.thumb.jpg.1acca49d55948bf1f47be8ac425274fb.jpg

    • Like 5

  4. On 5/3/2014 at 5:05 AM, M S Smith said:

    Is the focus to use clumping Echinopsis such as "Grandiflorus" and the Schick Hybrids and cross them with the columnars that have been our general focus with the goal of creating fully columnar Trichocereus with colored flowers, or are you not worried about outward form and only with flower color variation? I would love a project that breed colored flowers into T. pachanoi, peruvianus, bridgesii, etc., but looked to retain the fully columnar form with low rib number and minimal spination.

    ~Michael~

    Sadly, Michael no longer appears to be with us, but I believe I'm well on the way to producing the colored flowers for all of the columnar's  he mentioned; pachanoi, peruvianus, bridgesii etc

     

    In 2014 I cross bred spineless scopulicola with a variegated cherry red grandiflorus.  The resulting seedlings have manifested in two vegetative forms.  The dominant form has 6-8 ribs and closely spaced aeroles with spination that closely resembles grandiflorus.  The plant appears to clump freely and flowers at an early age of 2.5 years from seed, on their own roots and with a wide range of flower coloration.  This dominant form accounts for 99.5% of all seedlings.  Since the pollen donor was variegated, numerous variegated seedlings have resulted; many of which won't survive unless grafted.  The other vegetative form is also 6-8 ribs and similar aerole spination with wider spaced aerole's. I'm still waiting on flowers for this form.

     

    Around the same time I also crossed variegated cherry red grandi pollen with SS02xSS01 as well as with the plant that's labeled validus. The SS02xSS01 seedlings also appear to have formed two distinct vegetative forms.  The more dominant form has 7-9 ribs and appears 'shorter'; the less dominant form has 5-7 ribs and much greater aerole spacing.  The less dominant form appears to grow taller, although at just over a year & a half of growth on their own roots they are still to young to fully determine their true growth characteristics.  I only have a few seedlings of validus x vrg and thus only one form is visible.  These seedlings are also fairly small.  Only time will tell if these F1 hybrids continue growing to their full columnar height.

     

    I currently have 16 F2 developing fruits on 7 F1 'The Zelly' hybrids, with numerous buds yet to flower on these and other 'The Zelly' plants.

     

    The flowers themselves and their range of color on the F1 hybrids is just absolutely stunning.  The last pic also includes the cherry red pollen donor for the F1 hybrids.

     

    zellysDSC_0761.jpg

    zellysDSC_0769.jpg

    zellysDSC_0772.jpg

    zellysDSC_0804.jpg

    zellysDSC_0811.jpg

    zellysDSC_0761.thumb.jpg.5de0271306f2e305e4ddc79c46f9c151.jpg

    zellysDSC_0769.thumb.jpg.afa72f43961c40d1f14af439363dfb90.jpg

    zellysDSC_0772.thumb.jpg.b22c4927140e071fa9e1003b8cf91f83.jpg

    zellysDSC_0804.thumb.jpg.49934271863b517eecd213124084ac20.jpg

    zellysDSC_0811.thumb.jpg.c965503ef6c715f1fc0e47240862d0a4.jpg

    zellysDSC_0761.thumb.jpg.5de0271306f2e305e4ddc79c46f9c151.jpg

    zellysDSC_0769.thumb.jpg.afa72f43961c40d1f14af439363dfb90.jpg

    zellysDSC_0772.thumb.jpg.b22c4927140e071fa9e1003b8cf91f83.jpg

    zellysDSC_0804.thumb.jpg.49934271863b517eecd213124084ac20.jpg

    zellysDSC_0811.thumb.jpg.c965503ef6c715f1fc0e47240862d0a4.jpg

    • Like 12

  5. On 9/24/2014 at 5:07 AM, Dreamwalker. said:

    here is a supposed cross between a Toumeya papyracantha and an Echinocereus knippelianus:

    if it is then its very remarkable, although it is not proven and does resemble, if anything, a monstrose mammillaria:

    http://www.cactus-art.biz/schede/TOUMEYA/Toumeya_papyracantha_hybrid/Toumeya_x_knippelianus/Toumeya_papyracantha_x_Echinocereus_knippelianus.htm

    i have this hybrid plant, its pretty cool

     

    xxxxDSC_0562.jpg

    xxxxDSC_0562.thumb.jpg.12291a0b1dc4a6ea3be29003444aa511.jpg

    xxxxDSC_0562.thumb.jpg.12291a0b1dc4a6ea3be29003444aa511.jpg

    • Like 2

  6. looks healthy now.....until the next time black rot hits......

     

    I'm baby sitting a buncha plants for nitrogen.....so one day one stem in a large pot full of Super Pedro x Psycho0 grows a new pup & the tip is completely consumed with black rot.  Nitro stops by & wants to cut it off...Nope, let 'er grow I say.  A few months later the tip recovers on its own & is now a healthy growing branch.

     

    cactus plants are a whole lot tougher than most humans give em credit for......

    • Like 5

  7. still on the hunt? 

     

    Another creeper is trichocereus arboricola.  Arbi will grow columnar for 1-2 years then the columns flop over & grow horizontally or hang down if grown in a hanging basket

     

    cuts of both could be shipped..................

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