Hello Plant Friends, You can further support my channel by joining our channel membership. ru-vid.com/show-UCBjIYJ-I6UrluJXNDHYN5tQjoin Q: When does the channel membership start and finish? A: The channel membership starts the moment you join and remains active as long as you maintain your subscription. It is a recurring monthly subscription that supports my channel and provides you with some perks. You can cancel your membership at any time, and access to members-only content will continue until the end of the billing period. Keep in mind that any perks or benefits received during your membership, such as badges or emojis, are yours to keep even if you decide to cancel. Q: Where does the fund go? A: Your membership fees play a crucial role in supporting the growth and improvement of the channel. The funds directly contribute to various aspects, including the purchase and upgrade of equipment to enhance video quality, acquiring new cactus specimens to feature, and covering the costs associated with organizing and filming engaging garden tours. Your support allows us to invest in the channel's overall quality and content, ensuring a better viewing experience for all members. Q: What are other ways to support the channel? A: Thank you for considering additional ways to support the channel! Apart from channel membership, you can show your support in the following ways: Like, Comment, and Share: Interact with our videos by liking them, leaving thoughtful comments, and sharing them with friends and family. This helps increase the visibility of our content. 2. Subscribe and Hit the Notification Bell: Subscribing to the channel and turning on notifications ensures you never miss an update. It also helps us reach a broader audience. 3. Provide Feedback: Share your thoughts and suggestions. Your feedback helps us understand what you enjoy and allows us to improve our content. Remember, your support in any form is highly appreciated and makes a significant difference in the growth and sustainability of the channel. Thank you for being an essential part of our community!
Thank you so much for your video, I took lots of notes! It's a shame we can't get these in the United States we'd make a million dollar's. TO pretty and Thank you
Sorry for the messy audio. You can turn on Closed Captions/ English subtitles for convenience. You can also follow along using transcript feature of RU-vid. Thank you for watching, I appreciate your support.
Thank you! That's the fun of buying and growing small specimen. It is cheaper, will easily acclimate in your place, and if you get lucky you'll have beautiful cactus in the future.
A really wonderful and interesting, instructive video packed with lot's of very useful infos, thanks so much for sharing!! You have a beautiful collection!! Have a great day!
Merhaba Ellerinize sağlık. Tüm yorumları okuyorum demişsin. Yaptığınız detaylı sunum ile fikir sahibi oldum. 2 adet bu türden aldım ve Türkiye'de yetiştirmeye çalışacağım. Teşekkürler.
Hi, thank you for watching! Yes, I try to read all comments, and try to reply to everything as much as I can. Good luck with your new cactus. Happy planting!
Thanks so much for your information. I am just starting to grow some Gymno seeds. When they get much bigger I will use your advice. For know I am using coarse river sand and coco peat on a reptile heat mat and grow lights. I just set up a small outdoor green house so I can protect my cacti from the weather and control my watering.
Thank you for showing your collection and sharing your experiences. I just got my first Gymnocalycium mihanovichii Variegata and was looking for informations on how to care for it. Your video was very helpfull! 😊
Dear Plant Prince, I found your channel because I just acquired a beautiful little gymnocalycium! When I bought it, it already had 2 flower buds. My journey home was a little bit long, with bumpy roads and a lot of walking while holding the cactus. Originally the flowers were standing upright. Now they are sagging towards one side. Do you know why this happens?
Thank you. You should water the grafted cactus more often since their rootstock requires more moisture. Sometimes, people add coco cubes to their soil mix to retain more moisture.
With proper sunlight exposure, soil-mix, temperature, and watering Gymnocalycium will grow fast. But keep in mind that there are a lot of factors to consider on how fast a Gymnocalycium grow, variegated Gymnocalyciums grow slower compared to nonvariegated. Some species of Gymnocalyciums are also slow growing. With these - I can’t give you a specific time, but usually a non-variegated Gymno with proper conditions will double it size within 6-12 months.
good afternoon. I live in cold Siberia. But at home, even in cold winter, it is warm, about +25 degrees. Tell me, do colored gymnocolitiums need a cold winter, with a decrease in temperature to +12-15 degrees?
Hi, they don’t need cold winter or temperature since Gymnocalycium in habitat don’t experience cold winter. They ate perfectly fine with temp of +25 degrees Celsius
Hi, ur gymnos are beautiful and well maintained. My problem growing this gymnos are the browning in the bottom. Can u share ur knowledge and experience on how to avoid this pls and why this is happening ?
The browning in the bottom is called corking. It’s a natural phenomenon that can be seen in cactus. It is usually triggered by the environment factors. One way to avoid it is by using akadama or japanese soil as top dressing, repotting the cactus before it outgrown its pot, and not keeping the soil mix dry for months. Although sometimes, corking is genetic.
Beautiful beautiful ❤ just lovely ❤ I got Ku first two but they come with small black stones as the final topping so my question is as I don’t have (at the moment) acadama how do I know when to water? I would really appreciate some advice. I am currently in Germany so winter is coming soon 😅 Thanks again, 😊
Thank you for watching! I have a video about watering, you can check it out. You can use toothpick and stick it at the bottom of the pot to check if the soil is still moist. If the toothpick is damp, then it means that the soil mix is still moist, if it’s dry then it means that you could water them.
Welcome 🙂 Yes. You can replace perlite with any grit components that is available to you, as long as it will improve the drainage. You could also replace it with pumice if you like. I just like adding perlite since it makes the soilmix lighter.
Thank you for informing us about gymnocalycium. I have a question. I dont have pumice, vermiculite and perlite but I have big amount of akadama. I also have klassman organik soil. Is making a mixture of akadama %60 and organic soil %40 be good for my gymnocalycium or do you advice me to do it your way?
Yes, you can use akadama. A 80% Akadama and 20% organic soil will work. Just keep in mind to repot every 1-2 years depending on your watering habits since akadama degrade and breaks through time.
Would u recommend only Akadama and pumice mix? Im based in a tropical area with lots of rain and humid. Scared using organic soil to avoid rot. Your advice will be appreciated please.
Hi, that will work as long as you supplement or add slow release fertilizer on your soil mix, and make sure to water your cactus more often (a good indication when to water is when the akadama changed its color).
After seeing this video, i will now go buy my first set of variegated gymnos. Quick question, since there are so many to choose from, is there any way to tell which ones are gonna stay variegated one side and which will go on to have that perfect variegation all around?
Sorry for the late reply. It is really hard to tell which one will have a perfect variegation. I just usally buy cacti with balanced variegation in all their ribs, and then hope for the best.
One expert in succulents , discourages the use if peat moss and rice hull. It contributes to root rot he said. As for me i'd rather use vermicast, we should still water, shower/sprinkle during winter or cold days. Do not halt watering, water them lesser amount-yes.. but i agree with rain water , tap water is usually alkaline so its not good for the soil, since the soil and plants prefers acidic ph water. If you use tap water that is alkaline, you will destroy the soil so you must need to replace them sooner than necessary. You may add vinegar in tap water to make it more acidic, but measure the acidity-it must be just around below 7 .
Your collection is great!!! How do you cope with fungies when they are starting to spread on your cacti? I dont know why my Aster and LB are really attracted to such as rust fungies :(((
Thank you. Prevention is always better than cure. I always make sure to give my cactus an environment wherein fungus can’t thrive. Always make sure that you keep the cacti dry, have a good air circulation, and sunlight exposure. I also give them proper nutrients to make them strong against pest. If they already have fungus, separate those that are affected and spray fungicide. It will be better if you use two kinds of fungicide with different ‘mode of action’ alternately. This will make sure that the fungus will not adapt or have resistance to one specific fungicide.
@@theplantprincephwhich fungicides and insecticides are you using? I saw you put some purple or pink powder directly into the soil. Also soaking your cacti in some systemic fungicide while repotting. Thank you!
I’m sorry. I’m not sure what you meant by the loosing the variegation due to direct sun exposure. Variegation depends on the gene of the cactus so they don’t normally loose it even if you put them under direct sunlight. (They will only get sunburned)
Ohhh. Sadly once a cactus get severely sunburned, it can’t go back to how it use to be. This is why I highly suggest not to put variegated cactus or cactus with no to few spines under direct sun. Anyway, you could place it in a bright area, a partial shaded area eventually it will outgrow its sunburned part.
I water them after 3 days. But not full watering, just enough water to moisten the soilmix and encourage roots. I also mix rooting hormone to the water to help root growth.
Not sure if how long they will last since I think there were no information about it in the web. But I’ve seen collectors with Gymnocalycium hybrids that is more than 3 decades. I think they could last long with proper care.
Hi, you can use any organic available in your area or you can increase the ratio of the coco peat and peat moss. You could also use crushed horticultural charcoal.