Ocotillo Flowers Coming

Ocotillo Flowers Coming

We had the landscape guys replace the old ocotillo cactus that was in front of the house outside of the courtyard last year because it was dead. The new one is in the same place and is showing every sign of being a viable addition to our xeriscape.

Springtime is when many of the desert cacti get flowers and the ocotillo is no exception. The photo at the right shows the top of one of our ocotillo.s canes with the makings of a cluster of flowers. The inset shows a cluster that I photographed downtown yesterday. Click on the image to enlarge.

I am very excited to finally have ocotillo flowers. The old ocotillo never produced much of anything in the way of leaves nor flowers before it gave up the ghost last year. It once tried to have a flower, but it dried up and broke off before really becoming one.

Here are a few factoids about ocotillos from Wikipedia:

Fouquieria splendens (commonly known as ocotillo, but also referred to as coachwhip, candlewood, slimwood, desert coral, Jacob’s Staff, Jacob Cactus, and vine cactus) is a plant indigenous to the Sonoran Desert and Chihuahuan Desert in the Southwestern United States and northern Mexico.

Ocotillo is not a true cactus. For much of the year, the plant appears to be an arrangement of large spiny dead sticks, although closer examination reveals that the stems are partly green. With rainfall the plant quickly becomes lush with small (less than 1 inch) ovate leaves, which may remain for weeks or even months.

Individual stems may reach a diameter of 2 inches at the base, and the plant may grow to a height of 30 feet. The plant branches very heavily at its base, but above that the branches are pole-like and only infrequently divide further, and specimens in cultivation may not exhibit any secondary branches. The leaf stalks harden into blunt spines, and new leaves sprout from the base of the spine.

The bright crimson flowers appear especially after rainfall in spring, summer, and occasionally fall. Flowers are clustered indeterminately at the tips of each mature stem. Individual flowers are mildly zygomorphic and are pollinated by hummingbirds and native carpenter bees.

Cactus Rescue – Epilog

Last Lobe in Bloom

The last lobe of the hedgehog cactus we rescued opened it’s single flower today. That gives us confidence that all lobes still in pots will do OK until we can plant them in Damsel’s rock and cactus garden.

We may have mentioned before that we have a couple more wild hedgehogs in the upper lot. Well, both of those are now in bloom and, judging from the flower colors, they are each a different cactus variety.

Upper Cactus Lower Cactus

We have already brought one hedgehog down from the back lot, so, in Damsel’s thinking, we should only bring a couple of lobes from the upper and lower back lot hedgehogs for the rock and cactus garden, leaving the rest to remain up in the natural desert part of the property.

Click on any of the images to enlarge.

Argentine Giant Flowers Now Showing

Giant Flowers

When we saw the white tips of the inner petals showing on the flower buds this morning, I knew that they would be open tonight. Two of the three large buds opened into the showy night-blooming flowers that make the Argentine Giant Cactus popular.

From Wikipedia:

Echinopsis candicans is a species of cactus from northern Argentina. It has large fragrant white flowers that open at night.

The cactus has a shrubby growth habit, with individual stems up to 24 inches tall. The plant as a whole can be as much as 10 feet across. The stems are light green, with a diameter of up to 5.5 inches and have 9–11 low ribs. The large white areoles are spaced at 0.8–1.2 inches and produce brownish yellow spines, the central spines being up to 4 inches long, the radial spines only up to 1.6 inches. The fragrant white flowers are large, up to 7.5 inches across and 7.1–9.1 inches long.

Thrasher Cleared For Takeoff

Thrasher Launch

I walked out to the driveway yesterday thinking I would take some cactus flower pictures, but before I could direct the camera lens at the cacti, I saw this curve billed thrasher perched atop our big saguaro out front. I did not actually see the bird at first, but its loud wheet whee wheet call made me turn just in time to see it on the big cactus.

I pointed and shot several frames just before and after it leapt into the air and was gone. This was one of four images I took as it hastily departed. Click on the image to enlarge.

I’m not sure why the bird was on the big saguaro. It’s too early for fruit and there are no active nests on the big guy. Maybe it was just looking out for potential predators to its nest in a nearby cholla cactus.

Argentine Giant Flowers Coming Soon

three flower buds

My Argentine Giant cactus has several buds on it that will likely open into giant white flowers. It will probably be a couple of days, but three of the five buds are almost ready to pop open with the beautiful flowers. The other two flower buds will follow with a couple more flowers a bit later.

The cactus isn’t particularly a giant, but the six-to-eight inch diameter flowers certainly are, among common cactus flowers. The cactus itself is only about fifteen inches tall, hardly a giant when compared to the saguaro, for instance.

The flowers smell like a fresh sea breeze the evening they open. I will post pictures of the flowers when they open. Click on the image to enlarge.

Rescued Cactus In Bloom

Rescued Hedgehog Cactus Flowers Opening

The three lobes of the rescued cactus we planted in the rock garden in front of the house two weeks ago, have started flowering. One of the other three lobes we put in pots at that time also has an open flower. From the looks of all of the rescued cacti, it seems there will be lots of flowers coming.

We hope the cactus in the picture (click on the image to enlarge) will take root and become a permanent part of the landscape. We haven’t figured out where to put the other lobes in pots, but when the work for the concrete RV drive is complete, we will select a place. It will have to be in a place where the dogs don’t go because of the needles.

Speaking of after completion of the RV drive, I have some ideas about what to do on the west side of the lot. First, I want the landscape guys to remove some of the creosote bushes that have become rather out of hand in the four years we have been here. Next, I want some vertical cacti like totem and smooth cereus that get white flowers all summer long. I also want to place golden barrel cacti around the rock garden on the house side of the drive.

There is always something to do in retirement. I love it!

A Simple Equation

The drone from the Greenbats continues without pause. Now, the Greenbat-in-Chief has directed FEMA to withhold disaster relief funds from states with sane governments. We so-called “deniers” are unworthy of federal money or some sh1t like that.

The worst part of it all, is that they know it’s all fabricated bovine feces. Yet, they peddle the poop as though it were real, in order to gain CONTROL. It’s as simple as that.

Well, I’m a “denier” and proud of it. There is real science that proves that solar activity is the principal factor in global climate variations.