Degrafting moon cactus
Degrafting moon cactus
Hi all! I have never purchased a moon cactus before given their relatively short life span. However, I was recently gifted one with a green scion. I know the rule of thumb is that gymnocalycium mihanovichii cannot survive on their own due to lack of chlorophyll, but the one I received is green and yellow. Does it have enough green that it would be able to survive on its own if I attempt to degraft it? Or should I just enjoy it while it lasts? Thanks so much!
Re: Degrafting moon cactus
Wait until the moon cactus has grown pups. Then take few big pups and plant them in soil. If they survived it after half a year(They should have roots to tell if it can do photosynthesis) then you can degraft it.
Sorry for my bad English…
Sorry for my bad English…
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- Location: Illinois, USA
Re: Degrafting moon cactus
I'd say that's green enough to survive on its own, but in my experience degrafting these guys is very hit-or-miss. In my case, just miss. Don't do it without rooting hormone.
Re: Degrafting moon cactus
I think it will survive on its own root. If you let it grow bigger before degrafting, I think you will have better chance of success.
Re: Degrafting moon cactus
Douwe's method is probably the safest, if it does grow pups.
As was implied, rooting variegated cacti depends on whether they have enough green chlorophyll producing tissue to thrive on their own roots. The red and orange "Moon Cacti" of course have none therefore they or their offsets can only be grafted onto another stock, never rooted down.
As was implied, rooting variegated cacti depends on whether they have enough green chlorophyll producing tissue to thrive on their own roots. The red and orange "Moon Cacti" of course have none therefore they or their offsets can only be grafted onto another stock, never rooted down.