New member in Bromley
Posted: Mon Apr 09, 2018 11:21 am
Hi all, I came across this site/forum last year while searching for some hardy cacti info!
I have always liked cacti, and some i have had for many years, a few pics below
most are in a greenhouse which is heated for 6 months of the year, as the plants have to
share it with an african tortoise, who demands most of the floor area!
Others are in the conservatory
why does it rotate some of the images?!
This is 'Dave' we named it because its so tall it feels like another member of the family standing there!
It, was an off cut from a still taller one that resides elsewhere, and is as such three years old only
and this is my work in progress, a recently constructed (Feb 2018) out door cacti and succulent
raised bed, currently with a few, tough as old boots, sempervivums that i had knocking about in
pots outside already and a small aloe aristrata, plus a couple of unknowns!
Soil is a mixture of topsoil, compost, plenty of grit/gravel and sharp sand, loose enough so that after
squeezing a handful in your fist, it still crumbles easily when damp.
Hopefully with many more to go in this year..... if it ever stops raining!!
I have always liked cacti, and some i have had for many years, a few pics below
most are in a greenhouse which is heated for 6 months of the year, as the plants have to
share it with an african tortoise, who demands most of the floor area!
Others are in the conservatory
why does it rotate some of the images?!
This is 'Dave' we named it because its so tall it feels like another member of the family standing there!
It, was an off cut from a still taller one that resides elsewhere, and is as such three years old only
and this is my work in progress, a recently constructed (Feb 2018) out door cacti and succulent
raised bed, currently with a few, tough as old boots, sempervivums that i had knocking about in
pots outside already and a small aloe aristrata, plus a couple of unknowns!
Soil is a mixture of topsoil, compost, plenty of grit/gravel and sharp sand, loose enough so that after
squeezing a handful in your fist, it still crumbles easily when damp.
Hopefully with many more to go in this year..... if it ever stops raining!!