Sunday, December 17, 2006

Lophophora grafts

Been doing some work in my growbox lately. My lophophoras are beginning to look quite good.

3 different strains: The topmost one is the one mentioned in earlier posts. The pereskiopsis stock has dropped all leaves, so it doesnt grow quite so fast anymore. However, it has started to produce som tuft on the top, and hopefully it will start to flower within the next few months. The other two (from left) is Huizache and Decipiens. The topmost one was planted from seeds aquired from eBay, and was labeled "Huizache".. but I doubt its true (doesnt look like my others Huizaches obtained from a more serious seller).



These are all Decipiens:

Sunday, November 05, 2006

New growbox

I decided to build a new growbox, intended mainly for seedlings and grafts. I simply put some plywood-plates together, added some white paint inside (reflectors) and finally mounted 2X 2X18W (4 tubes in total) fluoresecent tubes. The tubes gives 6500 Kelvin color (Phillips 965), cheap to buy & run, perfectly suitable for this purpose.



More grafts is on the way, it will probably be full this winter.

Saturday, October 28, 2006

Grafting on Pereskiopsis

Its autumn again, a good time to do some indoor activities.

Since I got lots of Echinopsis Subdenudata seeds laying around (see previous posts), and my Pereskiopsis growing like weed, I figured I'd do some grafts again. In addition I have a couple of other grafts from earlier experiments.

The Echinopsis Subdenudata's quickly developed pups, as shown (note the difference between the seedlings from the same batch):


Here is a closeup:


I also succeeded doing a multigraft:



This is an Echinopsis Lagenformis. Compare with the seedlings on the left, which comes from the same batch:

Friday, August 04, 2006

Growing lithops from seeds

In the end of May I planted some lithops, which I got from succseed. There were 3 types:

Lithops fransisci
Lithops marmorata v. elisae
Lithops schwantesii v. marthae


I dont have any experience with lithops, and I had limited success with these. L. marmorata seems to be most difficult one, with only 3 survivors out of aprox. 15 seeds. The L. fransisci, however, had a germinating rate of around 90%.



The picture shows 3 L. marmorata on the top-left, L. fransisci on bottom-left and L. schwantesii on the right. As you can see, there is some moss growing too which is caused by too much humidity.. it will probably disappear as I will keep it in more dry and ventilated conditions which is ideal for Lihops.

Wednesday, August 02, 2006

Cacti on steroids: grafting

3 months ago, I mentioned little Pete, my first graft ((L. Williamsii v. Huizache). This summer has been quite hot and sunny, and this has resulted in tremendeus growth for most of my plants.

Here is Pete 3 months later:



It measures ca. 2.7 X 2.8 cm, which I guess is not bad for just 3 months growth :)

Friday, June 30, 2006

Harvest

The Echinopsis from the previous posts was self-fertile, and I pollinated it by just blowing carefully on the flower. (There was also a second flower, which I did not do this and therefore didnt yield any fruit)

The fruit grows from the base of the flower, and falls of by itself when mature enough. There is probably around 200-250 seeds. I am not 100% sure about how the germination rates are for self-fertilized plants, but I'll give it a try. Of course I will graft the seedlings on Pereskiopsis.

Saturday, May 20, 2006

In bloom

My Echinopsis has been quite busy the last few hours. The bud started opening, and in a couple of hours it opened up:





The smell is incredible, my whole apartment is filled with a fantastic odor..

Tentacles

Around two years ago I bought this cactus which I believe is a Echinopsis subdenudatum. I kept it in a cold window sill during winter, with temperatures around 12-15C. This results in blooming for most cacti, and these Echinopsis'es has some real big flowers compared to their size. Here is the first tentacle coming out:

Friday, May 19, 2006

Gear

Here is how I propagate my seeds (very useful in the dark wintertimes and in rainy & cloudy periods). I use the following stuff:

2 Megaman flourescent plant-bulbs, 15W
1 banana cartboard box
1 mini greenhouse

The bananabox is beeing repapered with white sheets, which act as excelent reflectors. When the seedlings get to a certain size, i will put on the dome on the mini-greenhouse. I open the plastic sheet over the seedling a couple of times a days to air out. The megaman bulbs works quite fine, but I give them some real sunlight when the weather is on my side..

Also, if the box is kept in a cold room, you can easily put a heat-mat under it (adjust with some wooden boards or something like that).

These pictures should explain most of it:






Thursday, May 18, 2006

New seeds

Today I got a packet of seeds in my mailbox, from Succseed:

Lithops fransisci C 140
Lithops marmorata v. elisae SB 1205 (N Jackalswater)
Lithops schwantesii v. marthae H4886
Mammillaria sempervivi ML 24
Pilosocereus magnificus HU 224
Trichocereus bridgesii

So, tonight I'll probably put some of them in soil. I will also plant some of these:
Lophophora williamsii (Huizache, Mex)
(these are the same kind as "little Pete" mentioned i my previous post. He is doing very well, actually.)

Thursday, May 11, 2006

Little Pete back from the dead

Around 10 weeks ago i made my first grafts, one L.Williamsii and one T.Bridgesii (both on Pereskiopsis). Unfortunately I have been busy doing other stuff, like moving to a new apartment etc. I entirely forgot the grafts and left them in a dark spot.

The Bridgesii one was half failure. The graft grew very slowly, an indication that I didnt get the vascular ring alignment correct (a common mistake, there are some luck involved in this). The lopho, on the other hand, had imploded to a tiny brown something that didnt resemble anything living at all. Anyways, I placed it on a sunny spot.. and 3-4 days ago, I could actually see something happen. Amazingly, its alive! I can now see growth every day. In a week or two i will maybe know if it will grow fast like it should do.

First entry

Allright, this is my first post.

Last year I got a Trichocereus Pachanoi (San Pedro) cutting from a friend of mine. While surfing around for finding the best way to root it, I also found lots of interesting stuff about cactus-growing . Suddenly I got myself a new hobby.

Then I got this ridiculous about making a blog about my quasi-scientiffic mad experiments here in my apartment. Maybe somebody might find my trials and failures useful ? :)

Anyways, the cutting mentioned above started pupping in middle of February.. and has grown quite a bit since then: