Epiphyllum oxypetalum

Slippertalk Orchid Forum

Help Support Slippertalk Orchid Forum:

eds

Well-Known Member
Joined
Feb 16, 2019
Messages
552
Reaction score
375
Location
Nottingham, UK
Very nice Tom. My Epiphyllum anguliger has just finished flowering - they're much smaller but there are lots of them.
 

Ray

Orchid Iconoclast
Staff member
Moderator
Supporting Member
Joined
Jun 9, 2006
Messages
4,573
Reaction score
1,340
Location
Oak Island NC
One of the first plants I got when I started collecting.

They get ungainly over time, and my attempt to “bonsai” my current one is a mixed bag, so I may plant it in the hard next spring and see if it’ll overwinter outdoors.
 

Tom-DE

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jun 25, 2012
Messages
1,230
Reaction score
464
They do get big over time....but it should be no problem to keep a manageable-sized plant since it is so easy to root a decent cutting and grow them again.
 

Ray

Orchid Iconoclast
Staff member
Moderator
Supporting Member
Joined
Jun 9, 2006
Messages
4,573
Reaction score
1,340
Location
Oak Island NC
The one I currently have was a leaf only (about 11” long) when I got it 2years ago. I rooted it in a 4” pot and it grew a 3’ stalk, and I cut the top foot off. It had one blossom about a year after I got it.

it is still in that 4” pot (hence the “bonsai” comment) and has grown to a full 3’ this year, and had 2 blossoms several weeks ago.
 

Tom-DE

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jun 25, 2012
Messages
1,230
Reaction score
464
William, a large cutting from a matured plant can bloom in the following flowering season, which means as little as just a few months. This cactus grows well outdoor in summer, in part shade, warm, slightly dry out between waterings. It doesn't care much about the soil type as long as it has good drainage, I'd even used ordinary garden soil to root a few cuttings for my neighbor and friends.
IMO, I would let those "stalks" that Ray mentioned, grow some leaves. They normally will produce more flowers from those leaves, or cut the whole stalk off after they have some leaves and root the whole stalk...there, you have a good replacement for an old big plant instantly.
 
Last edited:

Cearbhael

Well-Known Member
Joined
Sep 6, 2021
Messages
162
Reaction score
86
Well, I have the exact same plant! It has grown tremendously, but has yet to bloom. I have raised and bloomed many Epiphyllium hybrids, but really got lucky while at a sheep and Alpaca fibre event. An alpaca owner had it on her table! I asked if she would be willing to part with and she smiled and said yes! It was small but very well established. They are supposed to be incredibly fragrant
 

abax

In Remembrance 2023
Supporting Member
Joined
Jul 8, 2011
Messages
13,042
Reaction score
998
Location
Kentucky zone 6B
Overwhelmingly fragrant. An elderly gentleman in the neighborhood had a HUGE one
growing all over his greenhouse attached to the gh structure. The blooming season
was a neighborhood event in that small greenhouse with over 90 blooms open at
once. I've mostly forgotten that period of my life, but I will always remember that
gh visit.
 

Latest posts

Top