Hey everyone! My name is Eric and I've recently fell down the cacti rabbit hole. Been doing tons of reading and research on the cold hardy varieties because I want to grow them outdoors with my prickly pears. Settled on echinocereus, escobaria, mammillaria and gymnocalycium varieties.
Now, I'm far from a plant beginner. Been growing carnivorous plants for over 15 years but my carnivores have opposing needs to cacti...really wet soil all year.
Included pics of some of my sarracenia and some E. coccineus seedlings.
Hello from KY
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- Location: Kentucky 6b
Hello from KY
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Re: Hello from KY
Hello Eric,
welcome to the CactiGuide forum. You do have quite a collection of non-succulents already. I do recognize the pitcher plants. So the other plant shown, which looks almost orchid-like (images 1 and 2), must be the Sarracenia plants? You certainly do have a lot of those.
I have never tried to grow cacti from seed, but those you sowed seem to be doing quite well. Most of my cacti are members of the Echinocereus genus. So you picked something that I may recognize at times. I think, that they are beautiful plants and most species produce large, brilliantly-colored blossoms. I also do like members of the Gymnocalycium genus.
Harald
welcome to the CactiGuide forum. You do have quite a collection of non-succulents already. I do recognize the pitcher plants. So the other plant shown, which looks almost orchid-like (images 1 and 2), must be the Sarracenia plants? You certainly do have a lot of those.
I have never tried to grow cacti from seed, but those you sowed seem to be doing quite well. Most of my cacti are members of the Echinocereus genus. So you picked something that I may recognize at times. I think, that they are beautiful plants and most species produce large, brilliantly-colored blossoms. I also do like members of the Gymnocalycium genus.
Harald
- gemhunter178
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- Joined: Mon Oct 31, 2011 6:10 pm
- Location: Massachusetts,USA. Zone 6A
Re: Hello from KY
Welcome!
That is quite a bunch of carnivorous plants! I have yet to keep one alive for more than 9 months....but I do pretty well on 'difficult' cacti!
I also grow a bunch of cacti/succulents outdoors, but I must say to remember that some plants can take cold, but not wet and cold...
That is quite a bunch of carnivorous plants! I have yet to keep one alive for more than 9 months....but I do pretty well on 'difficult' cacti!
I also grow a bunch of cacti/succulents outdoors, but I must say to remember that some plants can take cold, but not wet and cold...
A cactus and succulent collector who especially likes Ariocarpus. …Though I have a bit of everything! Want some pictures? See my flickr! I also do art and such.
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- Location: Kentucky 6b
Re: Hello from KY
Hi Harald! Thank you for the welcome. Pics 1 and 2 are also pitcher plants. In the spring they bloom before the pitchers emerge. One of my favorite things about them.hegar wrote: ↑Sun Aug 18, 2019 3:12 pm Hello Eric,
welcome to the CactiGuide forum. You do have quite a collection of non-succulents already. I do recognize the pitcher plants. So the other plant shown, which looks almost orchid-like (images 1 and 2), must be the Sarracenia plants? You certainly do have a lot of those.
I have never tried to grow cacti from seed, but those you sowed seem to be doing quite well. Most of my cacti are members of the Echinocereus genus. So you picked something that I may recognize at times. I think, that they are beautiful plants and most species produce large, brilliantly-colored blossoms. I also do like members of the Gymnocalycium genus.
Harald
As soon as I saw the echinocereus flowers I was hooked. Some of the prettiest flowers I've ever laid eyes on.
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- Joined: Sun Aug 18, 2019 4:01 am
- Location: Kentucky 6b
Re: Hello from KY
Thanks for the welcome! Why/how do you kill them? They're really easy to care for. Full sun, keep the soil wet and they should thrive. Mine sit in my backyard all year. They freeze solid as a rock and reward me every year with pretty blooms and offshoots in the spring.gemhunter178 wrote: ↑Mon Aug 19, 2019 2:04 am Welcome!
That is quite a bunch of carnivorous plants! I have yet to keep one alive for more than 9 months....but I do pretty well on 'difficult' cacti!
I also grow a bunch of cacti/succulents outdoors, but I must say to remember that some plants can take cold, but not wet and cold...
I actually have some succulent carnivorous plants. They're called pinguicula or butterworts. Here's a couple pics...grab more tomorrow. These don't really need lots of water. I let the soil get bone dry before I water them. They're in a mix of equal parts peat, perlite, silica sand and calciferous sand. A nice airy mix thats, what I'm assuming, close to what cacti like.
Thanks for the wet/cold tip. I'll keep that in mind.
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- gemhunter178
- Posts: 2764
- Joined: Mon Oct 31, 2011 6:10 pm
- Location: Massachusetts,USA. Zone 6A
Re: Hello from KY
I've only had venus flytraps (Dionaea, but they just don't seem to wake up after winters here.
I'll probably try again at some point. Perhaps I should keep them soaked a bit more...
That's a cool plant! I've seen them at some plant shows here, I think. Very nicely grown!
I'll probably try again at some point. Perhaps I should keep them soaked a bit more...
That's a cool plant! I've seen them at some plant shows here, I think. Very nicely grown!
A cactus and succulent collector who especially likes Ariocarpus. …Though I have a bit of everything! Want some pictures? See my flickr! I also do art and such.
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- Posts: 251
- Joined: Sun Aug 18, 2019 4:01 am
- Location: Kentucky 6b
Re: Hello from KY
Thanks! Venus flytraps like it a lil more dry than sarracenia. They should only be kept moist and need at least a gallon pot when mature because the have really long roots. During the winter it's best to take them into an unheated garage, greenhouse, basement, etc or insulate the pots with mulch. Especially if you're zone is any cooler than mine (6b).gemhunter178 wrote: ↑Tue Aug 20, 2019 4:34 am I've only had venus flytraps (Dionaea, but they just don't seem to wake up after winters here.
I'll probably try again at some point. Perhaps I should keep them soaked a bit more...
That's a cool plant! I've seen them at some plant shows here, I think. Very nicely grown!