apothecary Posted January 31, 2006 What do you guys think? It looks like one of the ribs has stopped and the other four have kept going. Do I have a winner? Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Rev Posted January 31, 2006 unlikley but not impossible more likley its messing with you id say i have ones that do that sometimes Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
apothecary Posted January 31, 2006 Cheeky bugger. I love it anyway On a side note, that cactus seems to be putting most of its energy into the pup and less into the main branch. Would I be better off cutting the pup off and rooting it on its own or letting it grow where it is? Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Rev Posted January 31, 2006 they do that i wouldnt be suprised if the pup is fatter than the parent i would leave it alone to get as big as it can before the end of the growing season. cut off and reroot either in the last few weeks of the season or in spring never remove a up at that size if u can help it. it doesnt have the critical mass to recover and grow fat and fast yet Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
gerbil Posted January 31, 2006 On a side note, that cactus seems to be putting most of its energy into the pup and less into the main branch. Ribbed for apo's pleasure I've noticed with pachanois mainly, but would be the same with others, as you said the energy goes into the pup, the main column will dehydrate more whilst the pup fattens up. It's probably easier to do to ground planted ones, but i've found upping the water is beneficial here to the point where the main column stays plump and not sunken ribs. I lightly squeeze the ribs every few days and adjust accordingly. Eventually they all generally catch up to each other around equal heights it seems, or there abouts. My ground planted pach's 1st side branch slowed the main, now the 1st branch is 1/2->3/4 way up the main column, now a new pup formed over the last few weeks and i'm expecting both to slow a little and the 3rd will catch up to a reasonable height then they all grow on. IME anyway. Nice looking bridgesii Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
apothecary Posted January 31, 2006 never remove a up at that size if u can help it. it doesnt have the critical mass to recover and grow fat and fast yet Hmm..that's not what I wanted to hear at all lol! Not so much for this pup, but the Eileen pup I got is roughly the same size. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Torsten Posted January 31, 2006 some of our bridgesii do this occasional montrose thing quite regularly. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Gunter Posted January 31, 2006 So far this branch looks like it has four ribs, it is an RS0005 bridgesii. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
teonanacatl Posted February 1, 2006 i had a scop which had 5 ribs, droped one, then another havinf 3 ribs for a short time only to pick up a rib a short time later on the opposite side, looks cool. bet it drops it then picks one up, or you could be luckey Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Rev Posted February 1, 2006 Hmm..that's not what I wanted to hear at all lol! Not so much for this pup, but the Eileen pup I got is roughly the same size. you could cut it but you would lose much potential growth in lost time and the pup would thin as it grew if u leave attached they grow much faster as the root system is supporting them if you want to bulk up numbers then getting several feet of vertical growth is good- then you chop to chunks if you are always cutting you break the momentum and IME yield less biomass over the medium term Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
ferret Posted February 7, 2006 a 4 ribbed bridgesii i'm babysitting for a mate Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
AndyAmine. Posted February 7, 2006 WOW! what a beaut!!! Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Rev Posted February 7, 2006 whoa Ferret youve certainly got your finger in a tasty pie ;) Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Conan Troutman Posted February 7, 2006 Was wondering the same thing as Apo as my fastest growing eileen pup has recently gone 4-ribbed. Heres hoping.. ^_^ Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
faslimy Posted February 7, 2006 nice bridgesii everyone! i love them Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
woof woof woof Posted February 8, 2006 Bridgedsii's are pretty cool indeed! I like their tendecy to rib or un-rib regularly. what is causing this - could it be considered a genetic instability? brid's are probably my fav's of the trichs. bummer they handle lots of humidity a little less better then Patch's & Peruv's. Ferret,... the pics of your Brids are nice! Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Dodie Posted February 9, 2006 I thought that health was a major factor...the happier the less ribs? or not... Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
zee_werp Posted February 9, 2006 Nah I don't reckon. Infact I have noticed the opposite - the happier the more ribs. I remember reading a report somewhere of an experiment some guy did of leaving his cacti in ridiculously small pots, it caused them to drop ribs. Cacti weren't too happy about it though. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites