View Full Version : CACTUS FLOWER
blacklight
29-03-2007, 05:19 AM
Hallo Group Members,
on my website www.rent-a-cloud.com there is a photo 'CACTUS
FLOWER' (under 'Greencards'). Could somebody, please, tell me its
correct common and botannical names? It is a cactus that grows in tall
multiple columns and, in this case, in temperate climate near Sydney.
Many thanks - Klaus Jaritz
tony@altavista.com
29-03-2007, 10:11 AM
On 28 Mar 2007 21:19:23 -0700, "blacklight" >
wrote:
>Hallo Group Members,
>on my website www.rent-a-cloud.com there is a photo 'CACTUS
>FLOWER' (under 'Greencards'). Could somebody, please, tell me its
>correct common and botannical names? It is a cactus that grows in tall
>multiple columns and, in this case, in temperate climate near Sydney.
>Many thanks - Klaus Jaritz
Looks like a Cereus type.... Hell I don't knwo their full names...
Have a lovely fruit ! When you get them.....
John Savage
28-04-2007, 02:19 AM
"blacklight" > writes:
>on my website www.rent-a-cloud.com there is a photo 'CACTUS
>FLOWER' (under 'Greencards'). Could somebody, please, tell me its
>correct common and botannical names? It is a cactus that grows in tall
>multiple columns and, in this case, in temperate climate near Sydney.
>Many thanks - Klaus Jaritz
Hi. Your site uses javascript, so I can't access it. But a tall
cactus I'd been chasing the name of turned out to be a Cereus cactus
named Peruvian Monster or Peruvian Apple because of its edible fruit.
It has large white flowers which tend to open at night, probably so
that it can be pollinated by bats or moths. I've seen it growing in
Sydney and colder frost-prone climes, and is much admired for its
stately columns.
This info might get you started, anyway.
--
John Savage (my news address is not valid for email)
FarmI
28-04-2007, 12:07 PM
> "blacklight" > writes:
>>on my website www.rent-a-cloud.com there is a photo 'CACTUS
>>FLOWER' (under 'Greencards'). Could somebody, please, tell me its
>>correct common and botannical names? It is a cactus that grows in tall
>>multiple columns and, in this case, in temperate climate near Sydney.
Your message didn't show up on my news server so I'm piggy backing on John's
response.
I can't see enough of the actual plant and that is pretty vital to
identifying the plant. The flower looks very like the one on my Nopalxochia
phyllanthoides "Dautche Kaiserin" but that is a draping cacti so it can't be
that.
http://www.plantoftheweek.org/week122.shtml
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