Showing posts with label Arizona night-blooming cereus. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Arizona night-blooming cereus. Show all posts
Tuesday, May 15, 2007
Cereus - Wow!!
On May 6, I blogged about a Night-Blooming Cereus that's growing round the corner from my house. Early this morning, my neighbour and I walked by and found this:


The blooms were buzzing with bees. They must have been attracted by the strong fragrance, which I could smell from half a block away.
The blooms opened up yesterday evening. By 9 a.m. today the blooms were gone. The plant won't bloom again until next May.
Sunday, May 06, 2007
Night-Blooming Cereus
Round the corner from where I live, there is a large, rambling Arizona Night-Blooming Cereus, Reina de la noche, growing in a front garden. 
When I looked closely at the plant, it seemed that several of the stems had little buds. Very often this species of plant blooms in June. I'll be checking it from time to time to see if more flower stems develop.
Peniocereus greggii is a slender-stemmed cactus with a large underground tuber that can reach the size of a basketball, and weigh as much as 15 pounds. Occasional specimens are known to weigh as much as 87 pounds. It is reported that native Americans utilized the tuber for food. The grey stems are four to six ribbed, to 12 mm in diameter, and resemble the stems of the shrubs that often support them. The stems are armed with short dark spines along the ribs. Flowers are large and beautiful, salverform, nocturnal, scented, white, to 7.5 cm in diameter. They last only one night. Fruits are red, ovoid, sparsely spiny, fleshy and many-seeded. ... The known range [includes] large areas in central Arizona, southwestern New Mexico, western Texas, and south into Sonora, Mexico at elevations below 4000 ft. from the website of The Desert Botanical Garden, Phoenix, Arizona
I smelled the beautiful scent of the flowers as I turned the corner on my Wednesday morning walk. Much to my surprise, there were only four blooms. In other years, the plant has been covered with them.

The next day, of course, the blooms had shrivelled.
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