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Cactus for ID


PalmatierMeg

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In early March I bought this gorgeous, fuzzy blue columnar cactus at a sale in Cape Coral. I believe it might be a Pilosocereus but what species? My research has come up with no Pilosocereus that comes close to it. Will a cactus guru tell me what it is?

 

Pilosocereus_4_ID_01_04-01-19.JPG

Pilosocereus_4_ID_02_04-01-19.JPG

Pilosocereus_4_ID_03_04-01-19.JPG

Meg

Palms of Victory I shall wear

Cape Coral (It's Just Paradise)
Florida
Zone 10A on the Isabelle Canal
Elevation: 15 feet

I'd like to be under the sea in an octopus' garden in the shade.

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1 hour ago, PalmatierMeg said:

In early March I bought this gorgeous, fuzzy blue columnar cactus at a sale in Cape Coral. I believe it might be a Pilosocereus but what species? My research has come up with no Pilosocereus that comes close to it. Will a cactus guru tell me what it is?

 

Pilosocereus_4_ID_01_04-01-19.JPG

Pilosocereus_4_ID_02_04-01-19.JPG

Pilosocereus_4_ID_03_04-01-19.JPG

Not 100% certain but most likely Pilocereus pachycladus. ( Most common / 2nd most commonly found Pilo. sp. in cacti collections. Other more obscure sp. are apparently harder to find, even among some of the specialty cacti growers i have bought from, who often focus on rarer stuff. )  Have a small P. azureus which typically is less fuzzy, and starkly Silvery Blue in comparison ( at least what i have observed ).  When i adopted it ( had broken off one of the plants we'd received ) we had ordered / received both sp. from the wholesaler. I almost bought one of the  pachycladus also at that time.. Love em both..   Well grown specimen too:greenthumb:.

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There are quite a few Pilosocereus and some are quite variable... one of the more fuzzy species is P ulei.  Might be that... certainly seems a tad too fuzzy for pachycladus, and not blue enough.

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It is a Pilosocereus, but not pachycladus...looks more like leucocephalus with the shorter spines, denser wool, and wider ribs; pachycladus tends to have longer yellowish spines and almost no fuzz.

Edited by SilverDragon

“Study nature, love nature, stay close to nature. It will never fail you.” –Frank Lloyd Wright

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  • 4 months later...

My first guess is in agreement for P. Leucocephalus, with all of that trademark Santa Claus wool for that species on dark blue-green skin with rusty-amber needle color.  It is less common in cultivation than P. Pachycladus but frequently encountered for sale online.  My P. Royenii (pictured with P. Pachycladus in left background) is very similar with short rusty-amber needle color and dark skin but with a touch more green and a lot less wool along the whole stem.  How is your cactus doing now?  I lived in Estero until recently but never tried putting any of my species of Pilosocereus in the powder sand ground.  Driftwood Garden Center in Estero has a lot of uncommon cacti including gems of this genus, and at a good price.  

738047955_RoyensJanuary2019.thumb.JPG.bfe69b774e0e021292cfc14e8962140f.JPG

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