golf at footjam

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clemons
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golf at footjam

Post by clemons »

the elementary theory) of the correspond- been solved in both the deoxy T-state and The fiber FISH molecular combing
See in the normal American arenas he might get a "wow" and that was sweet but it was against us He never actually gets cheered for as loud as he would at home or in Canada Usual USA arenas he would
Loosie: I see your point, understand and respect it, but.. Mats knows he's aged and have very few seasons ahead of him He also knows that the Leafs have very few talent and nearly no young talent to
have as many as forty grams of real carbohydrates. Do not buy these Total calories for this course 377 recent study showed that patients forget as much as 80
Last edited by clemons on Tue Sep 07, 2010 7:56 am, edited 2 times in total.
like the farmer said to the tater,,i,ll plant ya now and i,ll dig ya later..
hablu
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Post by hablu »

Take a look at Sulcorebutia's.
Harry
clemons
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Post by clemons »

Hablu,,those looked ok..any kinds recomended from north america..
like the farmer said to the tater,,i,ll plant ya now and i,ll dig ya later..
hablu
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Post by hablu »

Hi Clemons, I can't tell you about their habitats. Sorry.
here's a picture pf last summer in my greenhouse.
Harry

Image
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hob
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Post by hob »

hablu wrote:Hi Clemons, I can't tell you about their habitats. Sorry.
they are from south America, mainly argentina/bolivia Harry.

Turbinicarpus are quite small too, they are mainly from Mexico.
incurable cactoholic
growing rebutia's with a mix of others.
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hegar
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Post by hegar »

You could also add Pelecyphora spp. and Ariocarpus spp. Those are also slow growing and will not be very large once they reach full size. Some of the Mammillaria spp. also are rather small. Of course, it depends on how you specify "small".

Harald
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CoronaCactus
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Post by CoronaCactus »

Ortegocactus macdougalii stay small and look really cool ;)
ColdCactus
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Post by ColdCactus »

Look into Turbinicarpus, they are a dwarf species which inhabit the north-eastern regions of Mexico.
-Eli-
iann
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Post by iann »

All the suggestions are small-ish, but if you really want small, look at:
All Fraileas
Blossfeldia
Escobaria leei, mounds of tiny heads
Escobaria minima, even smaller
Mammillaria luethyi plus a number of other miniatures
Ariocarpus kotschoubeyanus, but not the other species
Copiapoa laui (but clusters rapidly)
Eriosyce laui (nearly impossible to find)
--ian
Lewis_cacti
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Post by Lewis_cacti »

you guys forgot Epithelanthas :wink:
they are from mexico and southern usa.
epithelantha micromeris, bokei and micromeris ssp. polycephala are probably the smallest, but all members are small. currently all the varieties are classified as subspecies of E. micromeris except. E. bokei. some subspecies such as E. micromeris ssp. greggi are a bigger. slow growing and take up hardly any room. they are one of my favourite plants :P
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Filord
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Post by Filord »

Yavia cryptocarpa is also a small one.
Rebutias are too small.
Filip
Loph
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Post by Loph »

dont forget lophophora and astrophytum. not the smallest but certainly a must have and they are hardly big.
Stephen Robert Irwin: 22 February 1962 – 4 September 2006. Rest In Peace.
clemons
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Post by clemons »

thanks for the replies..i,ll have to check those out on miles..springs almost here..
like the farmer said to the tater,,i,ll plant ya now and i,ll dig ya later..
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compostaholic
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Post by compostaholic »

Don't forget Cintia Knizei and Geohintonia.

You could get Cintia plants from Miles2go ($4) last year but I didn't see any when I looked today. You can get seed (very expensive) from mesa garden.

Mesa garden lists Geohintonia plants for $10 each while cactusspecialties.com lists them for $30 each w/ a limit of 1 plant!

I would really like to get a pair of Yavia plants or some seed as a second choice. Does any one know of a US source for them?

Thanks
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