So your cutting/s have arrived. The bottom end should be dry and calloused. Sometimes we use a little sulfur on the end to help with drying and to protect it from any infection. The sulfur may turn a few colors. It’s okay. Just check to make sure the end is dry! If it is, you’re ready to go to the next step. If still wet for some reason, keep dry and allow it to sit in the shade for a few days, or even prop it up so the end faces the warm sun to help out. ** Be careful though of leaving it directly on it’s side in hot sustained sun as they can burn while on their sides.
If the end feels mushy/rotted (rarely will this happen in shipping) , you will need to cut the rotted section off. Make sure you cut into nice healthy cactus. You want to get rid of anything that’s not healthy! Then allow to dry in a shady dry area as noted above, a few days if warm, a week or so if not.
OK, you have a dry calloused cutting end ready to plant. Soil is important for a number of reasons.
One, it needs to be porous/well draining soil, whether by adding sand, gravel, perlite, or other medium. Your soil needs to drain/dry quicker than your average houseplant soil or you risk your tricho rotting at it’s base. Wet, soggy soil kills succulents and cactus more than anything! If the soil is wet, it doesn’t need to be watered!
Two, your soil is both the home of your tricho and it’s major source of nourishment! You’ve invested in these plants so spend a little more and purchase/create a quality soil for your Tricho to thrive in. Ask your local nursery/gardening center for some basic cactus soil mix and you are ready to go/grow, or make your own. Google to learn how. You can later add fertilizer, worm castings, whatever you want to feed your cactus with, but wait to do this until it’s rooted and ready to take in the food!
Ok, so now you have your dry cactus cut, some proper soil (doesn’t need to be dry soil, a little moisture is just fine, just not wet, you shouldn’t be able to squeeze water out), a pot with ***drainage holes***, and now you will scoop out a few inches of soil and gently place her into the soil, 2-3” down is fine. If you have a heavy or long cut, you may need to support with a stick or something. Place in a dry and shady spot for the next 3-4 weeks as you wait for roots to begin appearing. At this time, you can carefully check for root growth by gently pulling your Tricho out and inspecting, either she’s started, or you have to wait patiently for another few weeks. If it looks rotted (shouldn’t), cut and start over.
An zlternative to vertical planting is laying your Tricho horizontally on the ground or in a large pot if your cuts are small enough. The advantages of this is if you find your Tricho pieces already broken and on the ground (check for roots along the section facing the ground), or if you have a large unattractive piece you want just to propagate from. Planting horizontally also provides more surface area for roots to form which in the end, will be a major factor in producing growth, as well as growth in multiple areas along it’s length!
If roots have begun, you can now begin watering gently, and make sure to wait for soil to dry a bit between each watering, remember, soggy sustained soil kills cactus!
Now your cactus are ready for some full sun, or you can experiment on their location. We have cactus in hot baking sun that are thriving if watered consistently. Color and growth are effected by lack of water. We also have many in partial shade, and some giants that have grown long and tall up along the sides of some trees, never getting full sun at all. This is up to you where you grow yours, but if you see them bending/reaching for the sun, you need to move them as this isn’t a good thing. Also, SLOWLY ACCLIMATE your recently rooted Tricho into bright, full, hot sun. They can sunburn just like you and I!
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