Jungle Cactus Photos

Friday, July 20, 2012
Man Eating Jungle Cactus
Ok, well maybe not man eating, but if you see him in person you might think it's possible. This is one of my Epis, and although there is not much in this image for size reference the blossom is at least eight inches across. These beauties are more like orchids than cacti. They, or more specifically their non-hybridized ancestors, grow in the South African jungle canopy and in the wild they are polinated by bats. Nature never ceases to amaze!

Wednesday, September 17, 2008
Epi Blossoms
I love my plants, as evidenced by the huge number of them on the site. This is an example of one in particular that makes us want a bigger back yard. The flower is about eight inches across. We have somewhere in the neighborhood of a hundred Epis. They're not all as big as this one, most are still small starts at this point. But if we want them to grow up to be big strong cacti we are going to need a lot more space! Once they grow up they are probably going to need their own site too... "The Epi of the Day"

Wednesday, September 3, 2008
Salmon Blossom
If you are not familiar with Epis, think christmas cactus' big brother. REALLY big! This one was only around six inches across. But some of them can get blossoms up to nine inches. One of ours has a single pad that is over two feet long. They are beautiful and we need a bigger back yard because we have collected so many.

Saturday, May 24, 2008
Evening Epi
It's a great time of year, time for our Epis to really start blooming. This one lasts a little longer than one evening so I'm pretty sure it is a hybrid of some sort. In the wild they only bloom for a single night. The blossom is about nine inches at the widest. The cup of petals in the middle is about four across. It is quite an amazing sight and makes for some nice night-time photography.

Friday, April 11, 2008
Lady in the Epi
The ladybugs seem to really love our epis.
Probably because when they start to bloom (the epis, not the bugs :-D) there's a lot of nectar
around the buds. The nectar seems to attract aphids. This time
we tried to get the jump on them. We bought a small bag of
ladybugs from the hardware store. Of course I was not going to let
them go until the camera was ready!
I used a bellows to get close enough for this shot. The whole background of the shot
is the same flower that the ladybug is sitting on.

Thursday, January 17, 2008
Iridescent Epi Blossom
One of our Orchid Cacti, blooming like crazy. It may look like a close macro shot, but it is actually THAT BIG! 'Bout 9" across. I have kind of gone wild with Orchid Cacti. We actually have about a hundred epis now. Most started from small cuttings.

Wednesday, June 6, 2007
Ackermanii in the Morning Sun
My wife pointed this blossom out to me this morning. It's a good thing too. The sun was so harsh this afternoon that the top of it got burned! This is on our biggest Orchid Cactus. It has been blooming non-stop for about a month which is pretty impressive since even in the shade each blossom only lasts for a few days.

Saturday, May 26, 2007
Salmon Epi
Another of our new Orchid Cacti cuttings is showing off. This one surprised me. The bud did not seem to grow when we first got it. And as a cutting, I did not expect it to. Unlike the Iridescence cutting that started opening the day we brought it home, this guy's bud was very small. Once we got it in the pot however it was a different story. The pad perked up and the bud got bigger and, as you can see, it is very happy now.

Saturday, May 19, 2007
Blooming Irridescense
Well Saturday has become Epiphyllum day apparently, so why break with
tradition. :-D
This is the second blossom on the cutting from last week
as it was about to open. The cuttings are all planted now and
seem to be doing well. I used a combination of soil, peat moss, bark and
coconut fibers.
I'm trying for better drainage than usual because from what
we have read they will actually have
a better root structure if they have to go looking for
water and nourishment. (I usually just plant them in potting soil.)
Since they are a jungle canopy plant, the
roots are supposed to be almost as impressive as the pads themselves,
up to six feet! Now that's a root! I'd like to see that, but
I don't know if I have the nerve to try to coax them into
growing that long.

Saturday, May 12, 2007
Epiphyllum Irridescense
Last Sunday there was a Cactus and Succulent show here in Santa Barbara.
We went looking for some new Epiphyllums, and specifically this one.
I saw one the day before at a Nursery and had my fingers crossed they would
have it at the show. We got this one as a single pad cutting. Of course
that one pad is about two feet long and four inches wide, with two blossoms.
To get an idea of the scale, the petals are almost an inch across and about five long.
The whole blossom is at least eight inches across.
I hope you like it, because there are more Epi photos to come. We got
seven cuttings at the show of six different varieties! I think it
is safe to say we have a jungle in our back yard now since I have
long since lost count how many we have.

Saturday, May 5, 2007
Wild Jungle Cactus
No it's not a man eating plant. (Well as long as I keep watering it and do what it says anyway.) The flowers on my Orchid Cacti are usually pretty amazing, but this one is particularly wild and they are not even open yet! There is nothing in the photo for size reference but the pink part of the blossom is at least four inches long. It's a good time of year to be a crazy photographer with a collection of wild plants!

Monday, April 30, 2007
Friends
When the Epiphyllum get going they really go wild.
This blossom (the red one) is from the beautiful
cactus that got us kicked out of our last apartment.
Well, maybe not that dramatic, but I sure was not going
to trim the cactus like the land lord wanted!
The lilies lived here when we moved in. They are actually in the
ground in what we now call "Cactus Corner". They have had
to stretch a little taller to see the sun. But they
make an amazing contrast with the cactus and they always
seem to be intertwined, I like to think they are friends.

Saturday, April 28, 2007
Spring Epiphyllum
It's looking a lot like spring around here. We've spent the last couple of weekends working on our yard. New pots and more dirt all around. This beauty now has an automated dripper. Even though it is a cactus, ours are the happiest when they are sitting in a puddle of water for a couple of hours a day. Of course if you have been treating yours like a desert plant, I would recommend making the transition to hydroponics slowly, so as not to shock it.

Tuesday, June 6, 2006
Orchid Cactus in the Fern
This plant is getting huge! I love it! It sits high on a stack of clay pots and wooden planters in the corner of our yard. This is one of its "exploration" runners that it has sent off in search of rich soil or water (or in lieu of that possibly small farm animals).

Monday, May 29, 2006
Night Blooming Epiphyllum
Another one of our Orchid Cacti
started it's show this evening. From what I read this is
more what they are like in the wild. This beautiful
blossom opened up as the sun was going down.
The flower has a great fragrance and it is about twice the size of
the flowers on our big day-blooming Epiphyllum.
It is at least 6" from tip to tip of the outside petals,
with the cup of petals in the middle being over 4".
Most of the wild Epiphyllum blossoms last only one night
and fade by morning so I wanted to get a shot of this right away.
This is the first time this guy is blooming since we got him,
so I don't know exactly what to expect. But,
If I can get him in full sunlight
I will try to get a nice shot with some reference to the size.
So, blooms at night, Has a blossom the size of a salad plate that is
white and fragrant that you could see even if you were flying around half blind.
Can you tell what they are trying to attract?

Friday, May 19, 2006
Epiphyllum Blossom
This is one of our blooming Orchid Cacti
that I mentioned the other day.
If you have one and want to know what makes them happy,
we have one in full sunlight and several in the shade.
(this guy is actually hanging from our patio umbrella)
The full sun one is HUGE, the others are still happy.
One was inside for a while. It is much happier outside, although
it grew very long thin pads looking for food while it was inside. Now
that it is outside it is popping out all kinds of thick
little pads along the lengths of the woody thin pads.
Makes for a very interesting plant.
One thing they all have in common is they love water.
You may think since they are cacti, they like to
be dry, but they are definitely jungle plants.
More about their history, and one of the reasons I love them
so much see this photo of the day.

Friday, May 12, 2006
Ladybug Closeup
We had a visitor in the backyard today.
This little guy is on the tip of one
pad of one of our Epiphyllum
(a kind of cactus, like a Christmas Cactus, but with bigger pads).
So many photos right in the back yard!
Speaking of that,
the Epiphyllum themselves are starting to explode! Their
blooms are an amazing 3"-6" across! I'll get a good shot
of them up here soon.

Wednesday, February 9, 2005
The Orchid Cactus
Another in the "Photos I Grew Myself" series!
This plant is the reason I moved out of my previous home.
The vertical bars in the photo are part of the railing on
the patio of our old apartment. At the time of this photo
this cactus had over sixty blossoms, each about three inches
in diameter. Only a small part of the plant is actually in the
picture. Our neighbors complemented us all the time on our plants.
Why did I have to move? The management of the property thought that the
plants were a little disorderly hanging through the bars like this.
So they wanted us to trim this one in particular.
Now we live in a
much nicer place where my plants have a lot more room, and I was able to
get a Basset Hound!
I have always loved Cacti, and this has got to be one of my favorite
types. I have several of them, but this one is by far the happiest.
I got it as a small start at the Santa Barbara Farmers' Market.
This Cactus is known as The Orchid Cactus, but the similarities
between this beauty and the tropical flowers go much deeper than just the
impressive blossoms. These Cacti are indigenous to the jungles of South and Central
America where they live in the tree tops. Just like most orchids, they
depend upon their host plant for access to the jungle canopy so they can reach sunlight,
but they are not parasites. Their nutrition comes from decaying vegetation and
other things trapped in the pockets of the trees where they live. This type
of plant is called an epiphyte, as opposed to a parasite which draws nutrition
directly from it's host. Orchids and Bromeliads are the most
recognizable members of this group, but it includes a vast array of plants from ferns to mosses, and lichens.
Update...
This plant is a "day bloomer" hybrid, whose blooms last for several
days. Most naturally occurring Epiphyllum species bloom only in the evening creating
enormous fragrant white blossoms that only last for one night.
I guess you have to do this when your "bee" is as big as a bird,
only comes out at night, and is as blind as... well... a bat.
Which, incidentally, is exactly what pollinates these plants
in the wild, along with the occasional large moth.
- Ecology.org.
Information on may different types of Epiphyllum. - The San Diego Epiphyllum Society.
Care and feeding of a wonderful plant.