Hi Magda, you have such a beautiful collection! A few things came to mind , R. cassutha is an old name for R. baccifera. The one you bought as R. burchellii is not an actual R. burchellii (some nurseries seem to be mass producing the one you have and selling it as burchellii, but the real R. burchellii has very fine segments, just like R. campos-portoana). There is no paradoxa major and paradoxa minor. There is R. paradoxa ssp. paradoxa (what some people call paradoxa major), and there is R. pacheco-leonis ssp. catenulata (which some people call paradoxa minor but is not a paradoxa at all). There's also R. paradoxa ssp. septentrionalis, but it is not as common as R. pacheco-leonis ssp. catenulata, and when people talk about paradoxa minor they most often mean the plant that is actually R. pacheco-leonis ssp. catenulata. The one you have as R. goebeliana is actually R. micrantha f. rauhiorum (you also have a large one you show later). Rhipsalis monacantha was reclassified as Pfeiffera monacantha in 1994. And your last plant was originally named Cereus ramulosus in 1834, reclassified as Pseudorhipsalis ramulosa in 1991, Disocactus ramulosus in 1993, and Kimnachia ramulosa (its current classification) in 2017. Take care, and thank you for sharing your beautiful plants with us!
Thank you Andrea for your amazing comment! I'll add those names to lables, it's so confusing with the names sometimes. Do you happen to know what this "burchellii" could be? Stay tune for part 2 :)
@@kaktus_cactus I don't. I assumed it was cereuscula, but someone else said it might be a type of teres. It might be easier to identify when it gets bigger and (hopefully) blooms.
Thank you!! Please could you tell me why the stems fall off my spaghetti type ones? I don’t think they’re over watered, they’re both baby ones, the stems look healthy not rotting. I’m afraid they’re dying! X thank you.
Lovely tour of your epiphytic cacti, Magda. Thank you for sharing with us as always. Have a wonderful day from Edith & myself 🌵☀️🌼🌸🌺🏜
Thank you for your support as always:)
Epiphytic cacti UA-cam channel is so knowledgeable! This was an amazing video and thank you for referencing her❤
Absolutely!! Happy you also liked my video-thanks.
Amazing collection! Very informative video!👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻😍😍😍😍Thank you for sharing🙏🏼🙋🏻♀️🕊💚
Thank you! I'm glad you enjoyed-thanks for watching!
Beautiful collection, absolutely enjoyed seeing a collection from across the pond 💚🌱
Thanks so much! 😊I'm so pleased you like my collection.
Thanks for this tour…really enjoyed…
Thank you, I'm so happy you liked it:)
Beautiful collection. What is the name of the first Micrantha please (my audio was inaudible at that point)? Thanks
Thank you, first-kind of trianagular is micrantha form kirbergii , then -I believe-micrantha f micratnha and 3rd micrantha f rauhiorum.
30:08 This looks like it could be Rhipsalis neves armondii forma megalantha. If so, flowers are worth waiting for!
I think you are right, hope it will flower thanks for your comment
Hi Magda, you have such a beautiful collection! A few things came to mind , R. cassutha is an old name for R. baccifera. The one you bought as R. burchellii is not an actual R. burchellii (some nurseries seem to be mass producing the one you have and selling it as burchellii, but the real R. burchellii has very fine segments, just like R. campos-portoana). There is no paradoxa major and paradoxa minor. There is R. paradoxa ssp. paradoxa (what some people call paradoxa major), and there is R. pacheco-leonis ssp. catenulata (which some people call paradoxa minor but is not a paradoxa at all). There's also R. paradoxa ssp. septentrionalis, but it is not as common as R. pacheco-leonis ssp. catenulata, and when people talk about paradoxa minor they most often mean the plant that is actually R. pacheco-leonis ssp. catenulata. The one you have as R. goebeliana is actually R. micrantha f. rauhiorum (you also have a large one you show later). Rhipsalis monacantha was reclassified as Pfeiffera monacantha in 1994. And your last plant was originally named Cereus ramulosus in 1834, reclassified as Pseudorhipsalis ramulosa in 1991, Disocactus ramulosus in 1993, and Kimnachia ramulosa (its current classification) in 2017. Take care, and thank you for sharing your beautiful plants with us!
Thank you Andrea for your amazing comment! I'll add those names to lables, it's so confusing with the names sometimes. Do you happen to know what this "burchellii" could be? Stay tune for part 2 :)
@@kaktus_cactus I don't. I assumed it was cereuscula, but someone else said it might be a type of teres. It might be easier to identify when it gets bigger and (hopefully) blooms.
Thank you!! Please could you tell me why the stems fall off my spaghetti type ones? I don’t think they’re over watered, they’re both baby ones, the stems look healthy not rotting. I’m afraid they’re dying! X thank you.
Sorry to hear it! it could be underwatered if you excluded any pests.Check the soil-the plants might be left too dry for too long. Good luck!