spooge Posted June 7, 2016 wondering what this plant is ?? at first i had thought it was a bridgesii a cut from the same plant was listed last week on ebay as bridgesii, the seller then changed the name to cuzcoensis a few days later i've listed some on ebay as cuzcoensis, there is some debate what it is, so i thought id post an id so hopefully some with experience can decide thank you 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
1 Evil Genius Posted June 8, 2016 Yes, this is a cuzcoensis. Is this from the SG? It could be one of the Chavin Cuzcos. They looked exactly like that. If they are the ones I think they are, they absolutely stunning and extremely rare. If not, it´s definitely a similar type. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
0 zelly Posted June 8, 2016 more than likely a bridgesii with in bred cuzcoensis genetics imo the first three pics show strong cuzco tendencies... 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
0 spooge Posted June 8, 2016 thanks Zelly all pics are cuts from the same plant Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
0 El Presidente Hillbillios Posted June 8, 2016 its a handsome beast whatever it is 2 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
0 zelly Posted June 8, 2016 Olive, fwiw, here's some comparison pics of Nitrogens Psycho0 x Cuzcoensis hybrid...... original seedling: in the above pic the tip got broke off when another plant came crashing down, here's the tip now on its own roots 18 months later... 7 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
0 sagiXsagi Posted June 10, 2016 (edited) ^^^^ awesome garden.. love the climber on the columnar puzzling.. maybe one should check for swollen bases of the spines to determine the degree of cuzco heritage.. Looks mostly cuzco.. Could be a cuzcoxbridge as zelly says or a cuzco X peruv/macro Edited June 10, 2016 by sagiXsagi 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
0 spooge Posted June 14, 2016 On 8 June 2016 at 6:21 PM, Evil Genius said: Yes, this is a cuzcoensis. Is this from the SG? It could be one of the Chavin Cuzcos. They looked exactly like that. If they are the ones I think they are, they absolutely stunning and extremely rare. If not, it´s definitely a similar type. Its a really big old plant from a suburb in Adelaide. was advertised on gumtree as the owners want it removed so they can build a shed where the old cactus garden is, was planted by the previous owner. Gotta be 30+ years old going by the size of it. 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
wondering what this plant is ??
at first i had thought it was a bridgesii
a cut from the same plant was listed last week on ebay as bridgesii, the seller then changed the name to cuzcoensis a few days later
i've listed some on ebay as cuzcoensis, there is some debate what it is, so i thought id post an id so hopefully some with experience can decide
thank you
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