Showing posts with label Echinocactus horizonthalonius. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Echinocactus horizonthalonius. Show all posts

Friday, November 16

Giant Flowers and the World's Smallest Peeping Tom

Echinocactus horizonthalonius
Echinocactus horizonthalonius aka, devil's head, blue barrel or eagle's claw cactus take your pick.  Easily the largest flower I have seen on a horizonthalonius at 6+ inches across.


Devil's head, blue barrel or eagle's claw cactus
Another Horizonthalonius with a smaller but darker flower.

Eastern Lubber Giant Grasshopper
My son found a giant grasshopper, 4 inches long not including the antenna!  I believe it to be an Eastern Lubber grasshopper, Romalea microptera.
Hello, Can I come in?

Wednesday, July 5

Tuesday, May 23

A Bit of Everything Today

Echinocactus horizonthalonius


Polanisia dodecandra

Clammyweed  (Polanisia dodecandra)

Coryphantha robustispina
Coryphantha robustispina
Blue-ringed Dancer
Argia sedula - Blue-ringed Dancer


Mammillaria sphaerica
Mammillaria sphaerica below a forest of spines.

Sunday, May 1

Question Mark

Echinocactus horizonthalonius






Echinocereus dasyacanthus (center) and a fruit on the Horse Crippler cactus.


Question Mark Butterfly
Polygonia interrogationis, Question Mark Butterfly, likes to land in my compost pile.


pink cactus bloom
Echinocactus horizonthalonius,

Friday, April 22

Eagle Claw Cactus

Echinocactus horizonthalonius
Eagles Claw Cactus

turk's head cactus
Echinocactus horizonthalonius


Echinocactus horizonthalonius
aka Blue Barrel Cactus


A little dish cactus garden.  Later this little arrangement would be attacked by red spider mites, killing half of the inhabitants before I discovered the problem.  The remaining survivors found a new home in the fireplace cactus garden.  Somehow just moving things into a more natural habitat balances conditions enough so that spider mites get added to someone else's menu...ants, spiders, wasps something in nature designed to counter balance a surplus.

Thursday, March 24

Eagle Claws and Twisted Ribs

Eagle's Claw Cactus (Echinocactus horizonthalonius) also less romantically known as Devil's Head Cactus in twin bloom and many times also blooms with three flowers at a time.  Some how these plants have an internal clock that if you had 100 of these cactus planted in different locations roughly 90% of them would bloom on the very same day.

This cactus can be found every 30 feet in some parts of the .Big Bend Ranch State Park.  Certainly one of the most striking color combinations.  Some of the Eagle Claw Cacti found in Big Bend are rumored to be 100 years old based on the incredibly slow growth rate.  I would estimate the cactus in this picture maybe a old as 20 years.




Twisted Rib Cactus (Thelocactus setispinus) in habitat close to Lake LBJ.  Variety is most likely 'hamatus' given that it has long hooked spines.  Some of these can grow quite large, I remember seeing one at Enchanted Rock that was over 18 inches tall.

These cactus were growing in full sun on a small novaculite dome in an open field.  These fields had just begun to be mowed by the city of Horseshoe Bay.  I found several cactus that had been cut in half or uprooted by the mowing blades.  Just a few years later any remaining cactus with a height over a few inches had been extirpated.

Mammillaria heyderi (nipple cactus) in a protected location.  Apparently these small semi-dome cactus can have yellow flowers but the only ones I have ever seen are cream colored.  The fruits are sweet as strawberries and come in two colors that I have observed brick red or magenta purple.


Another Mammillaria this one missing its' top most likely due to mowing blade.