A Blooming Thread
Re: A Blooming Thread
I love the warm reddish pinkish color on this one. Mammillaria bocasana? (didn't have an ID and that's the closest match I've found) Melocactus matanzanus
I'm hoping this is a good sign since I just recently bought it with not many roots. Though I just gave it a slight wiggle and it feels like it is attached to the soil, which seems good.
- mikethecactusguy
- Posts: 2178
- Joined: Tue Jan 22, 2019 12:51 am
- Location: Indio Ca
- Contact:
Re: A Blooming Thread
It take a long time for a melo with a Cephalium to re-root. Many times it will not. I had 2 that lost roots. One lived on for 2 years before dying because I kept misting it to keep it hydrated The second did re-root and has been doing well .
Mike The Cactus Guy
Enjoying the Spines
Enjoying the Spines
Re: A Blooming Thread
It does have some roots, just less than an ideal amount. I'm staying hopeful that it's enough to still support the plant until it recovers the rest of the roots. Plus its starting to get warmer so hopefully that helps even more.mikethecactusguy wrote: ↑Sun May 15, 2022 2:53 pm It take a long time for a melo with a Cephalium to re-root. Many times it will not. I had 2 that lost roots. One lived on for 2 years before dying because I kept misting it to keep it hydrated The second did re-root and has been doing well .
Re: A Blooming Thread
This is its name.Mammillaria bocasana?
Gymnocalycium pflanzii & Mtucana paucicostata.
Gymnocalycium neuhuberi & Rebutia pygmaea var. canacruzensis.
It's time for some night life. Another very first flower.
If your cacti mess in your job just forget about the job.
°C = (°F - 32)/1.8
°C = (°F - 32)/1.8
Re: A Blooming Thread
Thank you for the invite
- Attachments
-
- D4F98D5F-4D53-4BE8-83A7-E39E38B6D479.jpeg (320.63 KiB) Viewed 20789 times
-
- 3EADB95A-5F56-414C-BE06-51E406287601.jpeg (179.47 KiB) Viewed 20789 times
My name is Joe I Live in Hickory NC USA four equal perfect seasons.
- Steve Johnson
- Posts: 4579
- Joined: Thu Nov 03, 2011 4:44 am
- Location: Los Angeles, CA (Zone 10b)
Re: A Blooming Thread
Fantastic blooms, Joe!
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)
- nachtkrabb
- Posts: 1558
- Joined: Tue May 23, 2006 7:07 pm
- Location: Stuttgart, Germany
Re: A Blooming Thread
Folks, this thread is a treat. (Why are those two words pronounced that differently?!)
This year is treating me well, so I attach a calendar so far. I admit not all are cacti, but the flowers are still nice.
January: Crassula commutata February: Aristaloe aristata-flowers are hard to photograph. March: Pachypodium sukkulentum after a couple of years without flowering & very late in the year indeed. April: In the first warm days I had breakfast on the balcony with two Lophophores williamsii, one with an early flower. Last fall, I brought the 2nd Peyotl home as that was blooming and my old one wasn't. I thought, maybe they like to be together? And since February (incredible! In March I start to water them again after winter!) they flower alternatingly, of course with some interludes. Now look at that: May: Can you guess what is flowering here?! It is a Lewisia cotyledon cv. Mountain Dreams. And a dream it is.
June: First flower of the year of Astrophytum capricorne. Selenicereus grandiflorus. Mammillaria karwinskiana with a bumble bee. July: An Astrophytum hybrid. August: The dance was begun by Echinopsis subdenudata, who tonight will open up those three small buds in the picture. Then an old Astrophytum myriostigma var. nudum who is new to my place flowered: On the first day, the flower was yellow and silken as expected. On day 2 it opened rose and tousled?! The Stapelia grandiflora is giving a gala show this year. This is but one of more than a dozen flowers so far -- more to be coming. I am greatful. On looking at your gorgeus pictures, I should invite some mor Gymnocalycium to my place.
Oh gosh, how the heck would you pronounce "Gymnocalycium" in English..?!
N.
This year is treating me well, so I attach a calendar so far. I admit not all are cacti, but the flowers are still nice.
January: Crassula commutata February: Aristaloe aristata-flowers are hard to photograph. March: Pachypodium sukkulentum after a couple of years without flowering & very late in the year indeed. April: In the first warm days I had breakfast on the balcony with two Lophophores williamsii, one with an early flower. Last fall, I brought the 2nd Peyotl home as that was blooming and my old one wasn't. I thought, maybe they like to be together? And since February (incredible! In March I start to water them again after winter!) they flower alternatingly, of course with some interludes. Now look at that: May: Can you guess what is flowering here?! It is a Lewisia cotyledon cv. Mountain Dreams. And a dream it is.
June: First flower of the year of Astrophytum capricorne. Selenicereus grandiflorus. Mammillaria karwinskiana with a bumble bee. July: An Astrophytum hybrid. August: The dance was begun by Echinopsis subdenudata, who tonight will open up those three small buds in the picture. Then an old Astrophytum myriostigma var. nudum who is new to my place flowered: On the first day, the flower was yellow and silken as expected. On day 2 it opened rose and tousled?! The Stapelia grandiflora is giving a gala show this year. This is but one of more than a dozen flowers so far -- more to be coming. I am greatful. On looking at your gorgeus pictures, I should invite some mor Gymnocalycium to my place.
Oh gosh, how the heck would you pronounce "Gymnocalycium" in English..?!
N.
Love and Revolution!
...and still more cacti.
...and still more cacti.
- nachtkrabb
- Posts: 1558
- Joined: Tue May 23, 2006 7:07 pm
- Location: Stuttgart, Germany
Re: A Blooming Thread
Hallo greenknight,
is that really almost exactly one year ago that yo possted that nice Mamm?
Is your plant formed like a ball (which is what llifle shows) or does it become more cylindric with age, may I ask? Does it have thin, yellow spikes, slightly bowed?
I just checked the pictures here in the lexicon & obconella seems to be much darker & to have dark spines, not the funny yellow ones clashing with the pink flowers. (If I had that combination, I needed a therapist!) But on rechecking, it all gets pretty much more confused.
Thanks,
Nachtkrabb
is that really almost exactly one year ago that yo possted that nice Mamm?
I have a plant looking & blooming similarly. It was named Mammillaria polythele subs. obconella here in the forum. Now I am thinking, what is correct...? Or if I have something other growing here?greenknight wrote: ↑Sun Aug 15, 2021 12:01 am I caught my usually reliable Mammillaria rhodantha ssp. pringlei making a nice display just before our most recent heat wave:
Is your plant formed like a ball (which is what llifle shows) or does it become more cylindric with age, may I ask? Does it have thin, yellow spikes, slightly bowed?
I just checked the pictures here in the lexicon & obconella seems to be much darker & to have dark spines, not the funny yellow ones clashing with the pink flowers. (If I had that combination, I needed a therapist!) But on rechecking, it all gets pretty much more confused.
Thanks,
Nachtkrabb
Love and Revolution!
...and still more cacti.
...and still more cacti.
- greenknight
- Posts: 4823
- Joined: Tue Apr 30, 2013 4:18 am
- Location: SW Washington State zone 8b
Re: A Blooming Thread
There is a resemblance, but Mammillaria rhodantha ssp. pringlei has 18-22 white radial spines 5-8 mm long and 5-7 longer, stouter recurved yellow centrals. Mammillaria polythele subs. obconella usually has 4 long recurved central spines, which can be white, brown, red or yellow, and radials are absent or rudimentary. Both start out ball-shaped and become cylindrical with age.nachtkrabb wrote: ↑Thu Aug 11, 2022 3:12 pm Hallo greenknight,
is that really almost exactly one year ago that yo possted that nice Mamm?
I have a plant looking & blooming similarly. It was named Mammillaria polythele subs. obconella here in the forum. Now I am thinking, what is correct...? Or if I have something other growing here?greenknight wrote: ↑Sun Aug 15, 2021 12:01 am I caught my usually reliable Mammillaria rhodantha ssp. pringlei making a nice display just before our most recent heat wave:
Is your plant formed like a ball (which is what llifle shows) or does it become more cylindric with age, may I ask? Does it have thin, yellow spikes, slightly bowed?
I just checked the pictures here in the lexicon & obconella seems to be much darker & to have dark spines, not the funny yellow ones clashing with the pink flowers. (If I had that combination, I needed a therapist!) But on rechecking, it all gets pretty much more confused.
Thanks,
Nachtkrabb
My pringlei didn't get very tall before it decided to bend over and grow prostrate. Here's a photo that shows its current form - we've had a cool spell the last few days, causing a lull in blooming: It's bent sideways from the direction it started in, which makes it look shorter yet.
Spence
- nachtkrabb
- Posts: 1558
- Joined: Tue May 23, 2006 7:07 pm
- Location: Stuttgart, Germany
Re: A Blooming Thread
....hmmmm... My plant has loads of white radial spines, might be 18-22 and 5-8 mm long sounds well, too.greenknight wrote: ↑Fri Aug 12, 2022 4:06 am There is a resemblance, but Mammillaria rhodantha ssp. pringlei has 18-22 white radial spines 5-8 mm long and 5-7 longer, stouter recurved yellow centrals. Mammillaria polythele subs. obconella usually has 4 long recurved central spines, which can be white, brown, red or yellow, and radials are absent or rudimentary. Both start out ball-shaped and become cylindrical with age.
It has at 3 to 5 longer, stouter recurved centrals, which usually are yellow. In the full sun they are bleached to white near & on the top, but that doesn't count.
Looking at your plant (thank you for the pic!), mine might be its sibling.
So I dare say, my plant should be a M.rhodantha ssp. pringlei, too, shouldn't I? What do you think?
Besides: Your cacs looks real nice.
And wow, another lovely Gymno!
Nachtkrabb
Love and Revolution!
...and still more cacti.
...and still more cacti.
- greenknight
- Posts: 4823
- Joined: Tue Apr 30, 2013 4:18 am
- Location: SW Washington State zone 8b
Re: A Blooming Thread
I searched the forum and found the pictures of yours, it does look like a M. rhodantha ssp. pringlei to me. It's not that the top is bleached - it's normal for the younger spines at the top to be paler, they darken with age. There's considerable variation - I selected mine because it had really long, intensely-colored spines, giving it full sun has just maximized those characteristics. It was in lower light when I first got it and got slightly etiolated, when I moved it to more sun the new growth was fatter and the weight soon caused it to bend over. Yours doesn't have that thin section at the bottom, so it can support itself to a greater height, but it will eventually flop over if not supported.nachtkrabb wrote: ↑Mon Aug 15, 2022 5:43 pm<snip>
....hmmmm... My plant has loads of white radial spines, might be 18-22 and 5-8 mm long sounds well, too.
It has at 3 to 5 longer, stouter recurved centrals, which usually are yellow. In the full sun they are bleached to white near & on the top, but that doesn't count.
Looking at your plant (thank you for the pic!), mine might be its sibling.
So I dare say, my plant should be a M.rhodantha ssp. pringlei, too, shouldn't I? What do you think?
Besides: Your cacs looks real nice.
<snip
Nachtkrabb
Spence
- nachtkrabb
- Posts: 1558
- Joined: Tue May 23, 2006 7:07 pm
- Location: Stuttgart, Germany
Re: A Blooming Thread
Hallo Greenknight,greenknight wrote: ↑Tue Aug 16, 2022 4:03 am I searched the forum and found the pictures of yours, it does look like a M. rhodantha ssp. pringlei to me. It's not that the top is bleached - it's normal for the younger spines at the top to be paler, they darken with age. There's considerable variation - I selected mine because it had really long, intensely-colored spines, giving it full sun has just maximized those characteristics. It was in lower light when I first got it and got slightly etiolated, when I moved it to more sun the new growth was fatter and the weight soon caused it to bend over. Yours doesn't have that thin section at the bottom, so it can support itself to a greater height, but it will eventually flop over if not supported.
thank you very much for caring and searching. Please let me add two blooming pictures for everybody. Yes, the plant has a very broad base it grows from.
It is leaning very strongly towards the sun: Once I had to turn it around or it would have jumped down the balcony!
But I find that Mamms which grow more cylindrical tend to lie down...?
Next I'm going to change the plant's name in my database. Thank you again for your help.
N.
Love and Revolution!
...and still more cacti.
...and still more cacti.
- greenknight
- Posts: 4823
- Joined: Tue Apr 30, 2013 4:18 am
- Location: SW Washington State zone 8b
Re: A Blooming Thread
It's looking good, and blooming nicely - Rhodanthas don't produce massive numbers of flowers at once like some Mamms, but the blooming season is very long.
Mamms have no woody structure, so there's a limit to how much height they can support. Looks like that one has reached the limit.
Mamms have no woody structure, so there's a limit to how much height they can support. Looks like that one has reached the limit.
Spence
- nachtkrabb
- Posts: 1558
- Joined: Tue May 23, 2006 7:07 pm
- Location: Stuttgart, Germany
Re: A Blooming Thread
Not massive but persistent: I confirm that. My plant rarely shows with more than 10 flowers at the time, I don't think I've ever seen a whole wreath.
But it blooms almost all year round, even in the middle of winter at the living room window.
But it blooms almost all year round, even in the middle of winter at the living room window.
Love and Revolution!
...and still more cacti.
...and still more cacti.