Hello from the East Coast

New to the forum? Use this section to introduce yourself!
Post Reply
User avatar
PapaDelicious
Posts: 3
Joined: Thu Oct 02, 2008 3:46 pm

Hello from the East Coast

Post by PapaDelicious »

Hi all, you can call me Papa D and I'm from New Jersey, although am currently going to school in Boston. I recently got my first cactus (pilosocereus azureus) and really like it so far! I hope to get more soon, cacti just seem to have a lot more character than some other plants (although my exposure to plants in general is probably much lower than many here :P )
here it is:
Image
and if anyone has any suggestions for growing a cactus in a dorm room during the winter, I'd be glad to hear them :)
~Papa D
Sbradford89
Posts: 187
Joined: Tue Aug 12, 2008 2:38 pm
Location: Gap, Pennsylvania USA(Zone6-7)
Contact:

Post by Sbradford89 »

welcome from another east coaster. i noticed there arent many of us on this site so im glad to see another join it :) Nice plant by the way
So new... So much to discover...Sincerely Shala
daiv
Site Admin
Posts: 23625
Joined: Mon Aug 16, 2004 10:15 pm
Location: Long Prairie, MN
Contact:

Post by daiv »

Hi! Glad you joined and happy to see you make an introduction. That is a pretty good choice for a first cactus. Who knows? Maybe 15 years from now you'll have it growing in an outdoor garden somewhere and it will be 20 feet tall! :o

Anyay, for the here and now, you are going to have a challenge to keep it happy over winter. Do you have a windowsill you can put it on? What direction does it face? Hopefully the heater doesn't blow up through the windowsill either?
All Cacti are succulents, but not all succulents are Cacti
User avatar
John C
Posts: 3743
Joined: Wed Aug 20, 2008 2:23 am
Location: Fort Worth, Texas

Post by John C »

Welcome! Hope you enjoy yourself and learn a lot!
John In Fort Worth, Texas
"Where the West begins"
User avatar
hegar
Posts: 4596
Joined: Mon Jan 23, 2006 4:04 am
Location: El Paso, Texas

Post by hegar »

Welcome to the cactus forum from the edge of Texas. I am afraid I cannot supply you with a lot of information about growing these kinds of plants in New Jersey. I did grow a few cacti in Northern Germany when I was growing up there. We had to place them in the south facing window, to prevent etiolation - a growth response, resulting in thin stems due to lack of sufficient light intensity - or we could also grow "Jungle Cacti", which do not require as much light. Examples of those are Schlumbergera (Christmas & Easter Cacti), Epiphyllum spp., and similar kinds of plants. You will be able to learn a lot of growing skills from the British members of this forum though.

Harald
Post Reply