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What's up with my Trichocereus Bridgesii cactus? Options
 
TheCaterpillar
#1 Posted : 9/9/2017 7:43:52 PM

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So this spring time I happened to plant a cactus garden I currently have 6 achuma cactus a San Pedro and a Echinopsis peruviana var. tarmensis (KK214Cool. So I water them like a shot glass too half a shot glass off water every 2-3 weeks but never before 2 weeks.

Anyway my question is what is wrong with one of my cactus? It has started developing a mutation of some kind I'm not sure if I should remove it or let it be. I hope it's nothing to worry about but here's a picture of it I think it's developeing a root but I'm not a expert.
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endlessness
#2 Posted : 9/9/2017 9:10:59 PM

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looks like its just a root
 
downwardsfromzero
#3 Posted : 9/9/2017 10:08:35 PM

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That is definitely a root. Also they look a bit dehydrated. San Pedro cacti can take a whole lot more water than what you've been giving them. They are not like 'normal' desert cacti.




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roninsina
#4 Posted : 9/10/2017 8:08:35 AM

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downwardsfromzero wrote:
San Pedro cacti can take a whole lot more water than what you've been giving them. They are not like 'normal' desert cacti.



While my trich's are outside, in the summer, I totally drench them with a garden hose a few times a week. They grow pretty close to the 12" a year that can be expected from them.
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Psilociraptor
#5 Posted : 9/10/2017 1:41:34 PM
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Haha damned mutant cactus and their roots. It is a little weird the first time you see a cactus shooting a root out from the side. But you can literally lay these things flat on the soil and they will root side ways. I had some shoot out side roots from storage. Why on earth yours is doing it the way it is I have no idea.
 
downwardsfromzero
#6 Posted : 9/10/2017 9:47:05 PM

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roninsina wrote:
downwardsfromzero wrote:
San Pedro cacti can take a whole lot more water than what you've been giving them. They are not like 'normal' desert cacti.



While my trich's are outside, in the summer, I totally drench them with a garden hose a few times a week. They grow pretty close to the 12" a year that can be expected from them.

The 'summer' we've had here has meant my cacti have had a pretty much ongoing drenching and they've lapped it up. They grow fatter stems and the spines are MUCH more substantial. Also, it saves lugging cans of rainwater up three flights of stairs!

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β€œThere is a way of manipulating matter and energy so as to produce what modern scientists call 'a field of force'. The field acts on the observer and puts him in a privileged position vis-à-vis the universe. From this position he has access to the realities which are ordinarily hidden from us by time and space, matter and energy. This is what we call the Great Work."
― Jacques Bergier, quoting Fulcanelli
 
 
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