Tuesday, December 27, 2005

Lophophora williamsii v. caespitosa

I’m impressed. I found this photo of a humongous Lophophora williamsii v. caespitosa on the British Cactus and Succulent Society discussion forum.

Lophophora williamsii v. caespitosa
Lophophora williamsii v. caespitosa

According to the forum this amazing plant was sown back in 1972, and is just one of a batch. Unfortunately it doesn’t say when the picture was taken.

Munching on Lophophora williamsii - II

My cold house grown Lophs have been maimed by some critter eating big, hearty lumps out of them. There are no traces of snails so I expect the culprit to be a grasshopper or bush-cricket trapped in the house.

Maimed Lophophora williamsii (SB 854; Starr Co, Texas)
Maimed Lophophora williamsii (SB 854; Starr Co, Texas)

Lophophora diffusa (JR; Higuerillas, Queretaro) remains
Lophophora diffusa (JR; Higuerillas, Queretaro) remains

The plants above were sown May 1, 2004 and have grown in the cold house since. Some of this year’s Lophophora seedlings were also taken out by the “unwanted guest”.

I’ve wrapped the pots in horticultural fleece and hope this will keep the culprit out in the future.

Wednesday, December 21, 2005

Winter Solstice

Today is the Winter Solstice for 2005 - the Sun is now at its lowest declination in Northern Hemisphere skies. The Sun is returning; alas, (Northern) winter is just starting.

Monday, December 19, 2005

Ariocarpus & Epithelantha

I’m just home from California, slightly worn and jet-lagged. Again I took the opportunity and ordered plants from Mesa Garden to be delivered to my US hotel address (and again the plants are immaculate).

I received the plants listed below (all in the range of 10 years old from seed) and a couple of Opuntias for my winter hardy collection. The Ariocarpus and Epithelantha plants were potted yesterday in a mix of primarily limestone gravel, some loamy sand, and a bit of commercial cactus soil.

Ariocarpus fissuratus (SB413)
Brewster County, Texas, USA

Ariocarpus fissuratus (SB413)
Ariocarpus fissuratus (SB413)

The plants are approximately 2.5-3 cm (~ 1-1.2’’) wide, and 6.5-7 cm (~ 2.5-2.75’’) high.

Ariocarpus retusus (SB334)
Huizache, San Luis Potosi, Mexico

Ariocarpus retusus (SB334)
Ariocarpus retusus (SB334)

The plants are approximately 2.5-2.7 cm (~ 1’’) wide, and 7 cm (2.75’’) high.

Epithelantha bokei (SB416)
Brewster County, Texas, USA

Epithelantha bokei (SB416)
Epithelantha bokei (SB416)

The plants are approximately 1.5 cm (~ 0.6’’) wide, and 2.2 cm (~ 0.87’’) high (measured without the root).

Tuesday, December 13, 2005

Cacti of the Trans-Pecos & Adjacent Areas

I’ve meant to buy this book for more than a year now; I finally got it ordered and received my copy a couple of days ago. I haven’t read through it all yet, just browsed the sections on Ariocarpus, Epithelantha, and Lophophora. These are excellent and very informative; I’m looking forward to have the time to read the book from end to end.

Cacti of the Trans-Pecos & Adjacent Areas The Texas Tech University Press description reads: “Of the 132 species and varieties of cacti in Texas, about 104 of them occur in the nine counties of the Trans-Pecos region and in nearby areas. This volume includes full descriptions of those many genera, species, and varieties of cacti, with sixty-four maps showing the distribution of each species in the region.

The descriptions follow the latest findings of cactus researchers worldwide and include scientific names; common names; identifying characters based on vegetative habit, flowers, fruit, and seeds; identification of flowerless specimens; and phenology and biosystematics.”

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