Ferocactus plant ID, please
Ferocactus plant ID, please
Good afternoon dear cactus friends,
The raised from a seed mixture plant surely is a ferocactus; I call it gracilis but am not sure of it. Can you approve of my guess?
The raised from a seed mixture plant surely is a ferocactus; I call it gracilis but am not sure of it. Can you approve of my guess?
- Edwindwianto
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- greenknight
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- Location: SW Washington State zone 8b
Re: Ferocactus plant ID, please
Actually, this plant is about 11 years old, but all I can give it is a sunny (sometimes) windowsill facing south-west between midday and 6 pm. How old should a ferro be to have definitely recognizable features?
And Edwindwianto - thanks for your participation!
Re: Ferocactus plant ID, please
This might be also Ferocactus emoryi or even F. wislizeni.
For an exact ID the cactus should be in more-less blooming size or in its habitat.
For an exact ID the cactus should be in more-less blooming size or in its habitat.
If your cacti mess in your job just forget about the job.
°C = (°F - 32)/1.8
°C = (°F - 32)/1.8
- Edwindwianto
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- Location: Bangkok - Thailand
Re: Ferocactus plant ID, please
NP abd sorry i'am not helping...i'am still learning to identify correctly
Good luck with finding the true name
EDWIN
- greenknight
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Re: Ferocactus plant ID, please
It's still in its juvenile form, where the areoles are on prominent tubercles (big bumps), mature specimens are less tuberculate. How long until it takes its mature form? I can't say exactly, but I have a Ferocactus pilosis that I grew, like you, from a packet of mixed seed, and it took about 20 years.
Spence
Re: Ferocactus plant ID, please
I see your point; so I'd rather wait till the single areoles turn into rib lines!greenknight wrote: ↑Fri Mar 20, 2020 7:16 am It's still in its juvenile form, where the areoles are on prominent tubercles (big bumps), mature specimens are less tuberculate.
All right! 9 years more to go - and voila!- I'll find out the truth! Thanks for your info!greenknight wrote: ↑Fri Mar 20, 2020 7:16 am...I have a Ferocactus pilosis that I grew, like you, from a packet of mixed seed, and it took about 20 years.
- Ferocactus57
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Re: Ferocactus plant ID, please
Could be gracilis problem though is if it is 11 years old it should have started flattening the lower central, and the upper centrals start becoming distinct. In addition wispy radials should have started appearing. Now with the information of it not getting tons of direct sun might account for this. Solitary hooked central that is not flattened aka rounded almost needle like would normally point to emoryi or acanthodes eastwoodie. We can easily throw out eastwoodie. If I am seeing incorrectly from the photo and the centrals are flattened you can safely assume gracilis or a hybrid of gracilis. If not getting it into more sun (slowly) would bring out characteristics better. If central remains solitary and needle like emoryi or emoryi hybrid, if it flattens and more radials come in turning centrals into a cross, gracilis or gracilis hybrid.
Re: Ferocactus plant ID, please
F emoryi IMHO