Indeed. One of the prettiest P. aselliformis that I've ever seen in cultivation, especially considering where you have grown it.
Limestone top dressing
Re: Limestone top dressing
Thanks for all the replies, everyone. I posted this topic and then disappeared into a ton of work, just catching up now.
Yeah, I meant the limestone top dressing to be purely ornamental. Just a few larger pieces for an aesthetic acknowledgement of the habitat some of the plants come from. If there's room in the pot I've put some larger rocks (1/2-1") on top of the substrate for decorative flair—granite for my Mojave species, sandstone for AZ/UT species, etc.
One of the things I've done a bad job of the last few years is planting my cacti too low in my substrate with too much crowded around the base, which I corrected when I repotted my entire collection this year. I do sometimes use smaller gravel top dressing like Steve mentioned, but have made sure that it's not a thick later with nothing inappropriately clumped up around the base of the pants. Certainly nothing near the green tissue of the body.
Yeah, I meant the limestone top dressing to be purely ornamental. Just a few larger pieces for an aesthetic acknowledgement of the habitat some of the plants come from. If there's room in the pot I've put some larger rocks (1/2-1") on top of the substrate for decorative flair—granite for my Mojave species, sandstone for AZ/UT species, etc.
One of the things I've done a bad job of the last few years is planting my cacti too low in my substrate with too much crowded around the base, which I corrected when I repotted my entire collection this year. I do sometimes use smaller gravel top dressing like Steve mentioned, but have made sure that it's not a thick later with nothing inappropriately clumped up around the base of the pants. Certainly nothing near the green tissue of the body.
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Zac
Butte County, CA, USA
USDA Zone 9b
Mediterranean climate; hot, dry, sunny summers with rainy, moist, mild winters.
Zac
Butte County, CA, USA
USDA Zone 9b
Mediterranean climate; hot, dry, sunny summers with rainy, moist, mild winters.
Re: Limestone top dressing
I got some Dolomite for non-cactus purposes from this source before. A little pricey, but I didn't need much of it.
https://www.thebulkdepot.com/products/g ... pea-gravel
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Zac
Butte County, CA, USA
USDA Zone 9b
Mediterranean climate; hot, dry, sunny summers with rainy, moist, mild winters.
Zac
Butte County, CA, USA
USDA Zone 9b
Mediterranean climate; hot, dry, sunny summers with rainy, moist, mild winters.
- Steve Johnson
- Posts: 4537
- Joined: Thu Nov 03, 2011 4:44 am
- Location: Los Angeles, CA (Zone 10b)
Re: Limestone top dressing
Hi Zac,
Back in May 2012 I spent a wonderful afternoon photographing the Huntington's desert greenhouse collection, so check out the photos in my Flickr album:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/134602763 ... 863777449/
The top dressings on their pots are quite attractive, and they may give you some ideas on what you'd like to do. By the way, there's nothing inappropriate about having top dressing clumped around the base of the plant.
Back in May 2012 I spent a wonderful afternoon photographing the Huntington's desert greenhouse collection, so check out the photos in my Flickr album:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/134602763 ... 863777449/
The top dressings on their pots are quite attractive, and they may give you some ideas on what you'd like to do. By the way, there's nothing inappropriate about having top dressing clumped around the base of the plant.
If you just want photos without all the blather, please visit my Flickr gallery.
My location: Los Angeles, CA (Zone 10b)
My location: Los Angeles, CA (Zone 10b)