Some juvenile forest cereus - Hylocereus (eg undatus, polyrhizus, trigonus etc) or Selenicereus (eg testudo, megalanthus). Time will show when it will grow adult stems and flowers and later fruits.
As i see it for many years, its not growing big stem but is creeping along the ground. By any chance its the species growing on trees which hangs down along stems gripping by its roots?
cactusveda1 wrote: ↑Mon Aug 22, 2022 5:16 pm
As i see it for many years, its not growing big stem but is creeping along the ground. By any chance its the species growing on trees which hangs down along stems gripping by its roots?
Thanks for the links and info. Only question still in my mind is most of these dragonfruit plants are spineless inspite of being in hot sun and most of them are growing big stems faster, mine is very spiny and with thin stem as well over many years
cactusveda1 wrote: ↑Tue Aug 23, 2022 1:44 am
Thanks for the links and info. Only question still in my mind is most of these dragonfruit plants are spineless inspite of being in hot sun and most of them are growing big stems faster, mine is very spiny and with thin stem as well over many years
They are not spineless. When they are young, the soft hairy spines are obvious. When they mature, they lose the fine hairy spines, but still have the short and sharp spines.
cactusveda1 wrote: ↑Tue Aug 23, 2022 1:44 am
Thanks for the links and info. Only question still in my mind is most of these dragonfruit plants are spineless inspite of being in hot sun and most of them are growing big stems faster, mine is very spiny and with thin stem as well over many years
Hello, your plant may be Deamia testudo (=Strophocactus testudo?), which is more commonly known as Selenicereus testudo.