BBC Home

Explore the BBC

Front Page

Life | The Universe | Everything | Advanced Search
 
Front PageReadTalkContributeHelp!FeedbackWho is Online
New visitors: Create your membership
Returning members: Sign in
 
This is the Conversation Forum for How to Look after Cacti
<< Many thanks
Sadly.... >>

Subject: Thanks!
Posted Jul 9, 2003 by
Milos
 
Posting 1

Next Posting
This is by-far the most comprehensive guide to cacti care I've ever seen! Thank you for loads of great ideas - like the one about putting rock in the tops of pots. One thing I've always hated about my cacti is that the dirt in the pot looks so ugly, I am definitely going to try the rock thing. And the fish tank water, too -- well, when I get a tank that is (which has been on the list of 'things to do' for a few years now).

I'm a gardener of very little education, some guesswork and quite a bit of luck. I look forward to seeing how your tips improve the health of my cacti biggrin

I had thought that your interest in cacti was a product of your residency in Texas, I suppose now that it goes a bit further back than that. Thanks for sharing your vast knowledge ok

Reply
Read the First Reply to this Posting

Click here to register a complaint about this Posting
Subject: Thanks!
Posted Jul 18, 2003 by
No, four Goshos. Goshos for forks
This is a reply to this Posting  
Posting 2

Previous PostingNext Posting
It goes all the way back to fourth year in secondary school (early 70s) when I was a mere stripling of a young Gosho bigeyes

Thanks for those kind words. I think it always shows when someone writes an entry about a subject they know well as opposed to something they've just researched.

You can use anything as a top dressing, from sand to gravel to small pebbles (but not pebbles from the beach - you'll never get all the salt out and salt ain't good for cacti). I came to Texas to marry Mrs Gosho - the fact that cacti grow here too is a bonus, although I always knew I wanted to live in a place where cacti grow outdoors biggrin Actually, I do still have to bring them in ocassionally during the winter cos it gets as cold here as it does in most of the UK, but not for quite so long. Every three or four years they get an ice storm here, and this past winter we even had a few flakes of snow snowball wow Winter only lasts about three months though, and I find some of my plants here coming into flower at the beginning of March instead of in May.

I joined the local cactus society too - should have gone to the monthly meeting tonight but forgot all about it doh

Like yourself I know very little about gardening. The last summer I was in the UK I grew a few carrots and some onions, and the summer before that I even got a few soya bean plants to produce a modest crop blush But cacti suit me right down to the ground because they just get on and do their own thing. They're the cats of the world of pot plants. Have you any idea which cacti you have?

Reply
Read the First Reply to this Posting

Click here to register a complaint about this Posting
Subject: Thanks!
Posted Jul 18, 2003 by
Milos
This is a reply to this Posting  
Posting 3

Previous PostingNext Posting
I've only got one that's probably a true cactus, it's a ball shaped thing with spines that needs to be repotted - it's still in the pot I bought it in. I've also got what's called a Christmas cactus which I always thought was so named because it would flower around Christmas time, but mine seems to flower at all times of the year. Earlier this year I bought one called a Spring cactus which is similar to the Christmas one, but the 'leaf' sections are shaped a little differently and the flowers are different. It hasn't bloomed since I bought it, I guess I'll have to wait until next spring winkeye

I've also got a couple of plants that I'm not sure what they are, they have flat leaves, not like a cacti or a succulent, but they have spines all along the edge of the leaf. All the leaves spider out from the center of the plant and it tends to grow out instead of up. The first one I bought was a nice green color with white on the leaves, the second was kind of a rose color. When I got the second one home and set it on the counter I noticed the one I had in the window was kind of a rose color as well, and after a few days on the counter the rose one I bought had faded to white again. I got them both from the cacti section of the garden department though, so I assume they're all related.

Grandma was always a whiz with cacti, she even had some growing out in the yard for awhile. I don't know how they made it through the winters, we get a bit more snow than you do smiley . Before she sold her house she had a cactus out by the back fence that she had brought home from Texas and managed to keep alive outside in Missouri. I don't think she dug it up when she moved though, I wonder if the new homeowners have bothered to keep it up?

Reply
Read the First Reply to this Posting

Click here to register a complaint about this Posting
Subject: Thanks!
Posted Jul 19, 2003 by
No, four Goshos. Goshos for forks
This is a reply to this Posting  
Posting 4

Previous Posting
Those 'spider-like' plants sound like Agaves, or maybe Aloes. How big are they in circumference? Do they look anything like these? http://www.users.globalnet.co.uk/~jankol/

I like the sound of your grandma smiley

Reply
Click here to register a complaint about this Posting




Already at Start of ConversationNo Older Postings to ShowNo Newer Postings to ShowAlready at End of Conversation
Postings 1-20

Conversation list


Most of the content on h2g2 is created by h2g2's Researchers, who are members of the public. The views expressed are theirs and unless specifically stated are not those of the BBC. The BBC is not responsible for the content of any external sites referenced. In the event that you consider anything on this page to be in breach of the site's House Rules, please click on the relevant button to alert our Moderation Team.


Already at Start of ConversationNo Older Postings to ShowNo Newer Postings to ShowAlready at End of Conversation
Postings 1-20

Conversation list

Front PageReadTalkContributeHelp!FeedbackWho is Online

Most of the content on h2g2 is created by h2g2's Researchers, who are members of the public. The views expressed are theirs and unless specifically stated are not those of the BBC. The BBC is not responsible for the content of any external sites referenced. In the event that you consider anything on this page to be in breach of the site's House Rules, please click here. For any other comments, please click on the Feedback button above.


About the BBC | Help | Terms of Use | Privacy & Cookies Policy