[Arid_gardener] christmas catus

Dick rkgross3 at cox.net
Sun Dec 23 21:48:01 MST 2007


Thanks for your input, Athol.

Dick Gross

Bcc: Arid Gardener
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Athol Cline 
  To: Dick 
  Sent: Sunday, December 23, 2007 4:57 PM
  Subject: Re: [Arid_gardener] christmas catus


  Betty,  Blooming is relatively easy to manipulate with Zygocactus (Schlumbergera) species.  In Tucson I put my Zygocactus outside on a north facing  patio in September or no later than October.  After a few weeks about the first of November I transfer them to the south side entrance way which gets essentially all-day sun.  They need some hours of darkness and some cool temperatures. (But if it seems like they will frost in late November I cover with a sheet.)  You should see buds forming at the end of November beginning of December.  Leave them outside to allow the buds to increase in size.  When you want blooms bring the plants inside.  In a few days they will burstforth in great joy.  About 4 years ago all of the omens were good I guess and one of the Zygocactus plants had at least 100 gourgeous blooms.

  Athol Cline
  athol515 at earthlink.net
  EarthLink Revolves Around You.


    ----- Original Message ----- 
    From: Dick 
    To: Betty Robinson;Arid_gardener at Ag.arizona.edu
    Sent: 12/21/2007 2:37:46 PM 
    Subject: Re: [Arid_gardener] christmas catus


    Betty, if the plant is root-bound, you should be able to pop the plant out of its pot and right back in again without disturbing any roots. If that is the case, the water is probably flowing down the sides leaving the interior bone dry. If that is the case, you should be able to remove it and root-prune an inch or so from sides and bottom. Repot it and fill in the voids with the Miracle Gro. My mother used to bang the whole root mass against a rock to loosen up the clump. I am not sure that is the best method but it does tend to open things up.

    If the condition is due to channeling down the pot walls, use a 1/4th inch thick slat or any blunt object to pack soil around the sides. Then trickle a quarter inch head of water with a garden hose all day and all night to soak and flush out salts accumulated in the pot. Frequent, shallow irrigation and subsequent evaporation concentrates toxic salt in the root zone. A good flush will often invigorate the plant. It would be a good idea to flush salts before pruning roots.

    Use a quarter teaspoon of an all-purpose fertilizer per gallon of water of every time you irrigate the first month. Use your best judgement after that but take the plant outside and flush irrigate with the bottom embedded into garden soil.

    But, that is a lot of trouble, Bette. Toss the plant and get a fresh one.

    Dick Gross, Master Gardener Volunteer
    U of A Maricopa County Cooperative Extension


      ----- Original Message ----- 
      From: Betty Robinson 
      To: Arid_gardener at Ag.arizona.edu 
      Sent: Tuesday, November 01, 2005 11:27 AM
      Subject: [Arid_gardener] christmas catus


      I have two christmas catus plants. One is over 5 years old and looks tired and dried out. The other looks pretty good, but has been in the same pot for over 2 years. They bloom, but only a couple of blosums each. I was wondering if they need trans planting, and if so what kind of soil should I use.
      I have a bag of Miracle Gro and need to know if that soil will work. Also I don't know what kinds of fertilizer to use. Can you help me.

      Fred Robinson
      fredbettyr at verizon.net


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