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Rhipsalis Pilcarpa Kokedama measures 7 inches long in a 3.5 inch moss ball. The display plate is not included.

 

CARE: Rhipsalis pilocarpa grows best in the morning sun and partial shade in the afternoon. It is particularly suitable as a hanging kokedama. It needs a minimum temperature of 10 °C. Keep temperatures between 18-24 °C. In winter, a night temperature of 10 °C and a low watering without fertilizer will favour the spring bloom. When the flower buds appear, normal watering can resume, as well as fertilization. Keep humidity at around 30% or higher up to 70%. These cacti require regular watering and the substrate should not dry out completely.

 

These plants have low nutrient requirements in nature, so balanced commercial fertilizers should be diluted to half the recommended concentration on the label.

Rhipsalis Pilocarpa

SKU: S-RPK-XS
C$35.00Price
  • Rhipsalis pilocarpa, the hairy-fruited wickerware cactus, is a species of flowering plant in the cactus family that is endemic to Brazil. Scarce in the wild, it is known only in a small number of isolated locations. Its status is listed as “vulnerable” by the IUCN Red List.

    In the wild Rhipsalis pilocarpa is an epiphyte, using a host tree for support but not parasitising or otherwise harming its host. Growing to 50 cm tall and broad, its slim cylindrical stems are at first erect, becoming pendent with short straight branches arranged in whorls. The stems are crassulent, segmented, and potentially dividing after each segment. It is one of the Rhipsalis in which the spines are still visible, especially on the young stems.

    It grows as a small epiphytic shrub with initially upright and later hanging shoots. The dirty gray-green shoots are slender cylindrical, completely turning, up to 10 cm long and 1.5 cm in diameter. At the top, they branch into whorls. The 8 to 10 almost always pronounced ribs are finely striped in the longitudinal and transverse direction. The green, somewhat woolly areoles are occasionally purplish. From them arise 3 to 10 gray to white, bristle-like thorns. The fragrant, white, terminal flowers appear alone or in pairs and reach a diameter of 2.5 to 4 centimeters. The pericarp is covered with bristle-like spines. The wine-red, berry-shaped fruits are spherical and studded with bristle-like spines. They have a length and a diameter of about 12 mm. The fruits contain quite large, black seeds. It has been shown that viviparity exists in this species, that is, the seed can germinate very early, while it is still in the fruit attached to the mother plant.[

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