Turbinicarpus
Re: Turbinicarpus
Here are some photos from 2015
One of my favorites
T. hoferi
They are hard to grow from seed, they start off as very small seedlings compared to the other species.
I grafted a couple onto pereskiopsis first, then larger stock. T. andersonii Turbinicarpus pseudopectinatus
I grown many of these, some with purple flowers, some that are much slower or easy to kill
but this form has been a steady grower and seemingly hardy
the flowers are the bland color unfortunately. Turbinicarpus pseudopectinatus v. inermis
I've never been able to keep one these on there own roots
I have several, I like this photo because of the flower cluster
One of my bigger ones has some new heads, I will try again to root one.
One of my favorites
T. hoferi
They are hard to grow from seed, they start off as very small seedlings compared to the other species.
I grafted a couple onto pereskiopsis first, then larger stock. T. andersonii Turbinicarpus pseudopectinatus
I grown many of these, some with purple flowers, some that are much slower or easy to kill
but this form has been a steady grower and seemingly hardy
the flowers are the bland color unfortunately. Turbinicarpus pseudopectinatus v. inermis
I've never been able to keep one these on there own roots
I have several, I like this photo because of the flower cluster
One of my bigger ones has some new heads, I will try again to root one.
Re: Turbinicarpus
Some older photos of these small cacti:
If your cacti mess in your job just forget about the job.
°C = (°F - 32)/1.8
°C = (°F - 32)/1.8
Re: Turbinicarpus
If you include Rapicactus in Turbinicarpus there is a good article in the latest issue of the Free downloadable Essex Succulent Review:-
https://mailchi.mp/2757389339ba/essex-s ... 523b0ccb64
https://mailchi.mp/2757389339ba/essex-s ... 523b0ccb64
- arturo conan
- Posts: 297
- Joined: Fri May 24, 2019 12:06 pm
- Location: SEVILLA
Re: Turbinicarpus
I bought seeds of several Turbinicarpus species, 10 seeds each and sowed in 2006.
All of them were very similar but I think the 1st photo is T. rioverdensis.
2nd phot is a Turbinicarpus hybrid, T. alonsoi x Strombocactus disciformis.
All of them were very similar but I think the 1st photo is T. rioverdensis.
2nd phot is a Turbinicarpus hybrid, T. alonsoi x Strombocactus disciformis.
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- T. rioverdensis
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- T. hybrid
- IMG_4410 - Copy.JPG (125.45 KiB) Viewed 23273 times
My favorite cacti photos are in Flickr https://www.flickr.com/photos/146109677@N06/albums/
Re: Turbinicarpus
t. saueri - ysabellae
- eulaspiegel
- Posts: 65
- Joined: Mon Mar 29, 2021 5:51 pm
- Location: Northern Sweden
Re: Turbinicarpus
Beautiful plants!! I have some Turbinicarpus seedlings, but they seem to grow exceptionally slow for me (maybe lacking heat).
Growing mostly under LED lights, in northern latitudes. Especially interested in stem succulents and caudiciforms. Dreaming of my first greenhouse.
- mmcavall
- Posts: 1466
- Joined: Tue May 17, 2016 11:54 pm
- Location: São Carlos - SP, Southeast Brazil, Cerrado Region
Re: Turbinicarpus
Here is my contribution. Turbis are slow growers for me too, even with all the heat we have here. But they bloom since very young.
Re: Turbinicarpus
I like turbinicarpus very cool
- Tom in Tucson
- Posts: 442
- Joined: Sun Jan 02, 2022 4:12 pm
- Location: NW Tucson AZ area
Re: Turbinicarpus
Lets see valdezianus many , jauernigii many, pseudopectinatus maybe 10 ? harder to keep alive , lophophoroides 2 from seed, pseudomacrochele many, knuthianus 2 old ones, klinkerianus many, alonsoi two tiny seedlings bigger ones died, many mystery turb from seed from Aiko, saueri ssp. gonzalezii two I bought from miles, bonatzii 2 I traded for , another one I dont know maybe schmiedickeanus , andersonii 3 old ones, ysabelae a few from seed. Some are easier to grow than others at least the way I grow them . They are all rot prone
I found pseudopectinatus, ysabelae, knuthianus get orange rust on the stems if planted in my desert soil which has a higher than 7 PH more like 8+ , adding store bought ground up pieces of wood ( store bought soil sold in bags ) helped . If I add this to Ariocarpus they die . Echinocereus rigidimuss also likes organic wood pieces added but its not from the chihuahuan desert so kinda makes sense.
If I had to get rid of half my collection I would keep all the turbinicarpus
I found pseudopectinatus, ysabelae, knuthianus get orange rust on the stems if planted in my desert soil which has a higher than 7 PH more like 8+ , adding store bought ground up pieces of wood ( store bought soil sold in bags ) helped . If I add this to Ariocarpus they die . Echinocereus rigidimuss also likes organic wood pieces added but its not from the chihuahuan desert so kinda makes sense.
If I had to get rid of half my collection I would keep all the turbinicarpus
- nachtkrabb
- Posts: 1648
- Joined: Tue May 23, 2006 7:07 pm
- Location: Stuttgart, Germany
Re: Turbinicarpus
Hello Keith, that sounds impressive. Are they all winter bloomers?
Won't you add some pictures, too, please?
Thanks,
Nachtkrabb
Won't you add some pictures, too, please?
Thanks,
Nachtkrabb
Love and Revolution!
...and still more cacti.
Location: Stuttgart, Germany, getting definitely hotter every year.
...and still more cacti.
Location: Stuttgart, Germany, getting definitely hotter every year.
Re: Turbinicarpus
Winter bloomers yes I think almost all are . Pictures are somewhere on this website of many of them.
Re: Turbinicarpus
My T. dickisoniae, T. gracilis and T. flaviflorus are in bloom right now, and there are small buds forming on top of all T. pseudopectinatus (they usually bloom in February/March).
Many Turbinicarpus species, though, blossom regularly throughout the year multiple times.
Many Turbinicarpus species, though, blossom regularly throughout the year multiple times.
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- Turbinicarpus in bloom.jpg (144.77 KiB) Viewed 17061 times
- Tom in Tucson
- Posts: 442
- Joined: Sun Jan 02, 2022 4:12 pm
- Location: NW Tucson AZ area
Re: Turbinicarpus
Good looking. These are also some of my favorites. You never know when an occasional bloom will show up, but the typical season for most of them is late winter here.Nino_G wrote: ↑Sat Nov 04, 2023 10:39 am My T. dickisoniae, T. gracilis and T. flaviflorus are in bloom right now, and there are small buds forming on top of all T. pseudopectinatus (they usually bloom in February/March).
Many Turbinicarpus species, though, blossom regularly throughout the year multiple times.