Okay thanks, here goes then.
This summer i decided i wanted some - mescaline containing - cactus. They are hard to find where i live but after much perseverance I managed to find some san pedro and peruvianus seeds, as well as three 12 inch pedros. Yesterday I received 3 approximately 10 inch cuttings, diameter between 2 and 3 inches. There is one bridgesii cutting, one peruvianus and one spachianus (i'll grow it for the sake of growing and that's all). Now as it was such a mission to find them, I am anxious to propagate them correctly.
11 pedro and 1 peruvianus seeds were germinated about 2 months ago now. My first question is about these. I have been keeping them in moist soil and inside a plastic container with the lid on till now to keep the atmosphere humid. The are still quite tiny (maybe 1/8 inch high) but I am wondering if I should start reducing the humidity and moisture?
One of the 3 pedros is a little sick. There is a black spot on the top which looks like a burn and in the middle section there is a moldy spot. The guy who sold them to me offered it to me for free and said if I replanted it (which I have done) it should be fine, but I am wondering if I could maybe use it in another way. I have read that columnar cactus cuttings can be rooted on their side and that when done in this way the cutting will produce offshoots from both ends and possibly even the middle. I was wondering if it would not be better to trim the bad parts from the sick pedro and root it in this way - if this method really works?
Speaking of rooting cuttings, I found
this guide and was wondering if the advice given is sound? eg. Rooting in vermiculite? Winter is fast approaching where I live. I would be rooting the cuttings indoors where the temperature will not drop below 60° but the cuttings will only get around 1 - 3 hours direct sunlight per day. Will these conditions be okay for rooting cuttings or should I rather store them until spring?
Finally, in the interest of increasing the number of cacti in my garden, I was thinking of cutting the bridgesii and peruvianus cuttings in half and then rooting the bottom parts horizontally and the tips vertically. Are the cuttings at 10 inches too short to do this with, would it be better to just root them as is?
I would be happy to get any advice about this - I have not really found any specific answers and I have been searching a lot!
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