Plants Seeds and Cuttings
Home CHECKOUT Pest IssuesSucculent CareContact us Useful LinksGrowing Guides
 
 
Adenium Plants  
Adenium Seeds  
Agave  
Cactus Cuttings  
Cactus Plants  
Cactus Seeds  
Cool Plants  
Date Seeds  
Dragon Fruit Cuttings  
Dragon Fruit Plants  
Dragon Fruit Seeds  
Euphorbia Cuttings  
Euphorbia Milii  
Euphorbia Plants  
Hoya Cuttings  
Hoya Plants  
Opuntia  
Plant Pots  
Rebutia  
Seeds Adenia  
Seeds Adenium  
Seeds Cactus  
Seeds Oleander  
Seeds Palm Tree  
Seeds Plumeria  
Seeds Tree and Shrubs  
Succulent Seeds  
Seeds Water Lily  
Stapelia Cuttings  
Stapelia Plants  
Succulent Cuttings  
Succulent Plants  
Vegetables

CHECKOUT

View Shopping Cart
Euro 3.95

 Care - Information
 List of our plants
 Our product catagories
 Adenium Plant Care
 Adenium Seeds Germination
 Bourgainvillea
 Cactus Care
 Cactus Cuttings
 Carob Seeds
 Common Pests
 Dragon Fruit
 Dwarf Umbrella
 Echinopsis pachanoi
 Elephant Bush
 Epiphyllum Care
 Fig Tree Cuttings
 Hoya's
 Italian Cypress
 Kalanchoe
 Lantana Seeds
 Lithop care
 Milii Cuttings
 Mock Orange
 Oleander Cuttings
 Oleander Seed Germination
 Plumeria
 Prickly Pear Pads
 Prickly Pear Seeds
 Sanseveria cuttings
 Sedum Leaves
 Stapelia
 String of hearts
 String of Pearls
 Succulent Care
 Succulent leaf cuttings

Epiphyllum Care

Epiphyllum Care | www.buyourseeds.com

Most Epiphyllum cacti are easy to grow from pieces of the stem.

Allow cut pieces to callus for several days then plant into an appropriate medium.

Make your own potting mix with 3 parts commercial potting soil and 1 part small to medium pumice.

If pumice is not available, use bark chips or perlite.

The soil must hold moisture but drain quickly.

Keep the cutting in low light until it roots.

Do not let the medium dry out but do not let it get soggy either.

The orchid cactus cutting needs to be installed 1 or 2 inches below the soil at a serration.

Rooting should occur in a couple of weeks and after that the plant really takes off, producing new curled stems.

Rooted cutting now producing new shoots

Epiphyllum Cactus Plant Care

The biggest danger is overwatering.

The cactus needs to have moist roots at all times but they should not be sitting in a dish of water.

Make sure the top 1/3 of the soil is dry before watering.

In late winter, expose the cactus to cooler temperatures to promote spring flowering.

Keep them in the basement or a garage for a couple of weeks to spur bud formation.

The other biggest danger when raising Epiphyllums is lighting.

Consider that these plants grow in thick forests in the understory and are used to dappled light at best. Just like any plant, they need light but should be protected from bright midday light.

Morning sun is preferable with indirect light the rest of the way.

If you find a spot where the cactus is happy, make sure to leave it there, as they do not like change. Use a 10-10-10 fertilizer diluted weekly during the growing season.

In February, feed the plant with a 2-10-10 to promote blooming.

Repot every 7 years or so, but be warned, the plant only blooms when it is pot bound.

It might be best to wait and see if you get flowers before giving the plant a new home.

[FOOTER_TEXT]