Pitaya season

Created by popular request. Share what you know about man's past and present use of cacti.
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leland
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Location: North central Nicaragua

Pitaya season

Post by leland »

I tried something new--pitaya yoghurt. Mash hylocereus fruit with a fork, mix in plain yoghurt and sweeten to taste. Not bad.
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majcka
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Re: Pitaya season

Post by majcka »

Looks yummy. =D>
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Strange is fun, cacti are funnier!
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tumamoc
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Re: Pitaya season

Post by tumamoc »

I think you may have something there :D .
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gemhunter178
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Re: Pitaya season

Post by gemhunter178 »

Does look pretty good. :D
A cactus and succulent collector who especially likes Ariocarpus. …Though I have a bit of everything! Want some pictures? See my flickr! I also do art and such.
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BobbyZ
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Location: Saint Augustine Florida

Re: Pitaya season

Post by BobbyZ »

The gourmet cactologist sports a nifty desert. Someday I will be picking my own Pitaya. Till then I appreciate its fine drooping architecture on my patio Hylocereus. Hey the fruit are 3-5$ even in Florida, I do buy occasionally.
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leland
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Re: Pitaya season

Post by leland »

My wife was happy with the yoghurt and posted a pix on her fiesbuuk page. she said next time we should add a tablespoon of lemon or lime juice to punch up the flavor a little.

Meanwhile, just in the last year I have started planting hylocereuos cuttings at teh base of all large permanent trees on our property. Don`t know why I didn`t think of it earlier.
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BobbyZ
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Location: Saint Augustine Florida

Re: Pitaya season

Post by BobbyZ »

Happy growing and harvests with many more pitayas to come
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Brunãozinho
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Location: Paraíba, Eastern Brazil

Re: Pitaya season

Post by Brunãozinho »

Oh that picture made me hungry! I have planted some hylocereus wich are still small, I wonder how long it takes until they have fruits... nice idea with the yougurt, I want to try that with some other cacti fruit!
Bruno
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leland
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Location: North central Nicaragua

Re: Pitaya season

Post by leland »

I planted some on top of brick walls and the process was very slow, even with occacionally spraying the plants and walls with water. Then some of the roots that grew down the walls went into the ground and the plants really started growing. Now I am planting them in the ground at the base of walls and tying a piece of wood to the wall to give them a better surface to climb up. I expect 2 or 3 years to fruiting.

if you look online, you can see how the vietnamese plant 4 cuttings around a post and grow them out to make a tree like planting. Thats on my agenda , too.
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Brunãozinho
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Re: Pitaya season

Post by Brunãozinho »

The second method must be definetly better! :wink:

leland, these ones are native to your country, aren't they?
I will make an experiment with the cutting around the post, and maybe give a try with this method of pots and wire, like in this video.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QXAFrCIT6as" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
Bruno
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leland
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Re: Pitaya season

Post by leland »

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In the one photo you can see a plant growing from a cutting placed at the base of a tree earlier this year. It has a great start and the rainy season is not over yet.

The other photo shows a plant from a cutting also planted earlier this year. You can see it has reached the top of the wall and the lead stem is now hanging down. In the upper left of the photo you can see another hylocereus that was planted on top of the wall several years ago and is not making much progress. Just recently I attached the scrap of rotting pine board to the wall to provide moisture and nutrients for both of the hylocereus. On my other new plantings on this wall I have attached tree branches of 3 inch diameter to the wall for the plants to grow up. I have started hosing the garden to provide humidity every morning if it did not rain the night before.

Both cactus are rooted to the wall for support but this is a little hard to see in the photo. The large horizontal roots on the wall are from the native philodendron growing on the other side.

The plants I think are native I am growing out as part of my native cactus project. The others are of ``horticultural origens`` and are for the fruit.
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Brunãozinho
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Re: Pitaya season

Post by Brunãozinho »

Nice to see the pictures, oh they will surely do better with the woodboard! the first one also seems to be doing good! ;)
Bruno
apfire
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Re: Pitaya season

Post by apfire »

I am just looking for the defining statement to put here. Follow this link to see my other cacti.
http://s290.photobucket.com/user/apfire ... cti%202013, 2014 http://s290.photobucket.com/user/apfire ... New%20Year
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BobbyZ
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Location: Saint Augustine Florida

Re: Pitaya season

Post by BobbyZ »

I can't wait for mine to bloom, but the UF IFAS pub says to expect 18 months before flowering. I thgought buds were forming just aerial roots. Someday soon.
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leland
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Re: Pitaya season

Post by leland »

Here`s another interesting one I'm working on. I think it is H. escuintlensis. I picked the first, and only, fruit today and will let it fully ripen before I open it. I am very curious to see the color of the pulp.
Last edited by leland on Mon Dec 18, 2023 9:22 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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