trichocereus identification

Discussion in 'Cacti and Succulents' started by long ripps, Sep 17, 2008.

  1. long ripps

    long ripps Member

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  2. Cereusly Steve

    Cereusly Steve Active Member

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    All Trichocereus are now included in the genus Echinopsis.
     
  3. long ripps

    long ripps Member

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    ok ...
    what kind of echinopsis? :)
     
  4. long ripps

    long ripps Member

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    this is what i know by now (thanx to thenook.org):

    t. brisgesii
    t. pachanoi
    t. peruvianus
    t. ?
    t. pachanoi (typical ecuador/peru var.)
    t. pachanoi
    t. peruvianus

    so actually, I'm only looking for nr. 4 now ...
    and not 100 % sure about number 2 either.


    grtz

    wesley
     
  5. mitchnast

    mitchnast Active Member 10 Years

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    what you are thinking of as "Trichocereus bridgesii" IS ACTUALLY Echinopsis Lageniformis

    The name "echinopsis bridgesii" was already taken by another, non-psychadellic cactus.

    The people at thenook.org will confirm this for you.
     
  6. mitchnast

    mitchnast Active Member 10 Years

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    ALSO, the first one looks far more like E. cuzcoensis than lageniformis. But with all the hybrids and mutations you'll NEVER know the truth. I can guarantee however it's NOT E lageniformis (t. bridgesii)
    number 4 is some sort of e. peruvianus/macrogonus species, with highly etoliated offsets.
     
  7. Cereusly Steve

    Cereusly Steve Active Member

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    Interesting that they are all hallucinogenic species. Its a shame they are being so poorly grown.

    One should consult Anderson's "The Cactus Family" for the current correct names in Echinopsis and synonymy.
     
  8. mitchnast

    mitchnast Active Member 10 Years

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    the morning glories in the background seem fitting too :)
     
  9. long ripps

    long ripps Member

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    I have a lot of non-hallucinogenic cacti too ;), it started with these though :p
    can you tell me what I'm doing wrong?
    very new at this, I give them as much light as I can and not too much water, what should i do differently?
     
    Last edited: Sep 28, 2008
  10. mitchnast

    mitchnast Active Member 10 Years

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    more light. make it possible :) 1000W in a mylar room should do it. with regular feedings, and pest control
    you WILL have pests.
     
  11. long ripps

    long ripps Member

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    ok, I will :)

    another questioon :

    someone told me to put my cacti in a dark room over the winter ...
    is that info correct?
     
  12. Cereusly Steve

    Cereusly Steve Active Member

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    NO, that is not correct at all.
     
  13. long ripps

    long ripps Member

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    ok, thought that was strange, thus the question :)
    thanx for the replies !
     
  14. mitchnast

    mitchnast Active Member 10 Years

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    its correct if you also ensure the temperature does not exceed 15C or go below 0 for more than a few hours at a time.
    and you dont water or feed them. 5-10c is ideal for dormancy. as close to 5 as possible Id say.

    save yourself the effort of maintaining the light all winter.
     
  15. mitchnast

    mitchnast Active Member 10 Years

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    Im keeping mine in a minimally heated, insulated, shed this winter.
    Now i gotta find some heating device that can manage keeping a 5deg temp
     
  16. Thomas Anonymous

    Thomas Anonymous Active Member

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    Nice looking cactuses. I read somewhere the only way to tell for absolutely certain is to examine the blossoms --- but yeah, it looks like San Pedro (spaniards 'St Peter', so called because he's supposed to be the keeper of the keys to the gates of heaven).

    I've got a witches garden of alkaloid-producing plants just for the curiosity factor, not because I'm actually into ingesting alkaloids (god forbid) --- and there's laws (and stuff) against that sort of behaviour, also.

    By the way,
     
  17. Thomas Anonymous

    Thomas Anonymous Active Member

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    Forgot to mention --- check the soil pH - they love alkaline soil at pH of 7.5 to 8. If pH is less than that add lime, crushed shells and the like.
     

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