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Cereus question
"Cereoid+10" wrote in message gy.com... Don't assume anything. You know what they say about people who assume? I think I'm learning. Without an actual description of the plant and its flowers, it could be any of hundreds of night blooming cactus species in several genera, ranging from epiphytes, vines, columnar species and even tuberous rooted geophytes. Quite correct. However, that's not the point here. The above epiphytes have general, common requirements as do the terrestrials. If gwayner just wants help in growing the plant to blooming, that's all he needs to know. You can call the plant an SOB for all the plant cares about names. There's no reason on earth a person can't grow a plant without knowing its "real" name. The general rules I listed earlier will help him grow just about any of the species fitting the description of night blooming cereus. As I have said before, there is no such plant as "Cereusly peruvianaus". The plant passing under that name in the horticultural trade is something else. Again, quite correct. Again, irrelevent. Vcoerulea wrote in message ... I'm assuming you're talking about a semi-epiphyte, the kind with flat, triangular, or even round stems. They may or may not have visible spines but all will grow arial roots along their stems especially when stressed for water. This is the most common kind I've come across referred to as night blooming cereus. They may include Hylocereus, Selenocereus, Epiphyllums, etc. Regardless of the name, they all want a porous, well-drained, but moisture retentive mix to grow in. We grow the epiphyllums in a mix of spongerock and coconut chips with a healthy handful of coconut dust thrown in each 12" basket. The uprights or rampant growers we pot in 4-5 gal containers of similiar mix and try to keep them from rooting through the woven ground cloth into the ground. Pot-bound is not a problem. When their happy, your main job will be to constrain their growth. We had a Hylocereus we struggled to keep at 6-8'. We treat them similiar to our orchids by fertilizing them 1/2 strength every week with bloom builder substituted in early spring. With strong light ~50% shade, ours bloom over several weeks with as many as 20 blooms open at a time. There's frequently a rebloom in late summer. Now if you are talking about a Cereus peruvianus or similiar relative, potting in a well-drained mix is still a requirment. Run a large knife around the inside of the pot right up against the pot to remove the roots from clinging to the pot. Disturb the roots if they're a tight mass so there are free ends to grow out into the new mix and repot in the next larger pot. I don't know many who refer to this as the night blooming cereus, although the flower is large, opening at night at lasting several days. I do believe, however, that a person can grow a plant well by its common name without knowing the technical one. People have done it for many years, and without ridicule. "gwayner" wrote in message ... I have a night blooming Cereus that bloomed about 20 years ago and never since. What do I have to do to get it to bloom again. |
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