Great video, the soil proportions are spot-on. I like clay pots, but I haven’t tried a sealant, I usually line them with thin plastic. Unglazed clay pots play a cruel trick on plants. The aeration of the clay draws the roots to the sides, where they dry out quickly, often resulting in stress and the death of fine roots. Meanwhile the center mass of the soil remains too wet and encourages rot. The positive aspect of clay is the weight and that the pot doesn’t overheat and cook the roots if the sun is hitting the sides.
Small clay pots under 4" dry out too fast though. Need the sides sealed can leave bottom unsealed thats where you want the water to draw to anyway. Down
I started using soil similar to where they grow wild. Very little organic matter (1/8 cup to a gallon of mix). I am now using black gumbo for growing cotton, wheat or corn. They use cracks in the lime rock for pots. Most of the soil is black clay and very little with gravel. Your soil seemed to be packed a little which indicate sand. I screen all my soil with window screens to remove dust and sand. Perlite and pumice hold some water. Graded cleaned and screened) rocks are the best to use.
Remember Final Fantasy 8, and the main weakness against the GF boss, Cactuar, was water based attacks? I didnt understand at the time, but as i got into cacti collecting, ive learned FULL WELL the dangers of water to drout resistant plants. Luckily we're still in the very early weeks of May, and the last time i watered my cacti was 2½ weeks ago... but they got caught in a bit of a downpour yesterday. My phone lied to me and said no rain until 8pm, so i worked until 7pm, but then my wife told me it was raining pretty good at the house around 5pm. So unfortunately they all got a bit wet, but on the plus side theyre all awake from their dormancy and growing, so they should be fine, _especially if i get some hot and sunny days soon._ Today is sunny and warm, but my phone still has rain until Sunday. Hopefully its wrong and i get more sunny days. Im gonna be getting a small greenhouse soon, and i cant wait!!! Happy growing, and keep 'em dry until youre ready!!!
Excellent, info & video; thanks. As you said, the location itself calls for different strategies. I'm in Montana and growing Ariocarpus is an entirely different game. Loam from the desert does not work. Just as you've shown; gravel is it; these are rock eaters.
Good informative video , would like to know what organic material is used in soil , is that regular sieved potting mix or does that have some other blend like coco coir in it ? can small rocks be used two parts instead of pumice or let me know any other alternatives , can sieved dg be used . Would this mix work for succulents as well or would you suggest increasing organic material in it -- @south Texas humid weather
Great question! The soil is commercial potting soil which has ground up forest products plus peat moss; it doesn't need any extra stuff in it. You can try perlite instead of pumice. Decomposed granite is good too. This mix will work for succulents as well! For humid weather clay pots might work better than plastic.
I use the same mix with all my cactus including the ariocarpus and they seem fine. Cactus quest did a vid recently and he said his ario roots were still wet or moist after 1 week. I think the reason ur stuff rotted is that brown sand (?) It seems to be all around the root which probs caused it to suffocate
to add mineral, azomite is a good option. As for sifted organic, that is something you would have to do yourself. For a lot of our plants we use very little organic
Fantastic video. I have some question if I may, 1. Why do you not use sand at all? It is a cheap material in general and pure mineral. I observed that in large amounts tend to get really hard. 2. The rocks that you use are river rocks or something like that? 3. Do you like loamy or gypsum-like soils for Arios?
Great ideas on preventing root rot😌🙌🌟I think hydrogen peroxide does a good job killing bacteria on a struggling cactus and really cleans up wounds and fungal issues
Most root rot can be prevented if you use plastic pots and drill more drain holes all around the bottom of the pot instead of one little teeny drain hole at the bottom soil aeration is the most important part of preventing root rot also filling the pot with soil all the way to the top is incorrect there should be at least an inch or inch and a half of finish grade in the pot
Finish grade means what? small rocks around neck of the plant then yes . I find clay pots work best for old desert cactus with tuberous roots and plastic if you can find plastic that is durable works for regular cactus and succulents.
In my oppinion Why they’re rot is caused by the water are so alkaline, naturally cacti like acid water. U need to test ur water pH if its more than 7.5 and use for watering offcoursly they will die slowly
We use vinegar in our water to get the ph to 6. 7 being neutral. Yea high ph water not good especially in all mineral.soils no buffer in mineral soils.
Try using only pumice (without organic! may be instead about 10% zeolite), use dilluted cactus fertilizer with each watering and you will be surprised by the result.
This is the video that i need, thank you!
Great video, the soil proportions are spot-on.
I like clay pots, but I haven’t tried a sealant, I usually line them with thin plastic.
Unglazed clay pots play a cruel trick on plants. The aeration of the clay draws the roots to the sides, where they dry out quickly, often resulting in stress and the death of fine roots. Meanwhile the center mass of the soil remains too wet and encourages rot.
The positive aspect of clay is the weight and that the pot doesn’t overheat and cook the roots if the sun is hitting the sides.
Positive aspect of clay pots is the dry out fast wet roots on old desert cactus in a temperate climate not good.
Small clay pots under 4" dry out too fast though. Need the sides sealed can leave bottom unsealed thats where you want the water to draw to anyway. Down
Really liked the soil chemistry! It's really informative. I'd love to see more of it!
Thanks bruh
Awesome 👍 informative ❤
I started using soil similar to where they grow wild. Very little organic matter (1/8 cup to a gallon of mix). I am now using black gumbo for growing cotton, wheat or corn. They use cracks in the lime rock for pots. Most of the soil is black clay and very little with gravel. Your soil seemed to be packed a little which indicate sand. I screen all my soil with window screens to remove dust and sand. Perlite and pumice hold some water. Graded cleaned and screened) rocks are the best to use.
Remember Final Fantasy 8, and the main weakness against the GF boss, Cactuar, was water based attacks? I didnt understand at the time, but as i got into cacti collecting, ive learned FULL WELL the dangers of water to drout resistant plants. Luckily we're still in the very early weeks of May, and the last time i watered my cacti was 2½ weeks ago... but they got caught in a bit of a downpour yesterday. My phone lied to me and said no rain until 8pm, so i worked until 7pm, but then my wife told me it was raining pretty good at the house around 5pm. So unfortunately they all got a bit wet, but on the plus side theyre all awake from their dormancy and growing, so they should be fine, _especially if i get some hot and sunny days soon._ Today is sunny and warm, but my phone still has rain until Sunday. Hopefully its wrong and i get more sunny days. Im gonna be getting a small greenhouse soon, and i cant wait!!! Happy growing, and keep 'em dry until youre ready!!!
Never played FF8 but yes water can be a serious danger to cactus! Best of luck in your growing !
Just loved your clay pot a lot
Nice.. what do you recommend for haworthia? 1/3 organic 2/3 mineral or less of organic and more mineral? What's your recommendation?
@@getsetgarden 1/3 organic and 2/3 mineral is perfect for Haworthia
@@cactusduty5241 Thank you so much! Appreciate your reply 🙏🏼
Excellent, info & video; thanks. As you said, the location itself calls for different strategies. I'm in Montana and growing Ariocarpus is an entirely different game. Loam from the desert does not work. Just as you've shown; gravel is it; these are rock eaters.
Rock eaters yea they live in a white limestone soil very inhospitable to most plant life I would think.
maybe rub the interior of the clay pots with bee's wax. the wax will seep its way into the clay over time.
Good informative video , would like to know what organic material is used in soil , is that regular sieved potting mix or does that have some other blend like coco coir in it ? can small rocks be used two parts instead of pumice or let me know any other alternatives , can sieved dg be used . Would this mix work for succulents as well or would you suggest increasing organic material in it -- @south Texas humid weather
Great question! The soil is commercial potting soil which has ground up forest products plus peat moss; it doesn't need any extra stuff in it. You can try perlite instead of pumice. Decomposed granite is good too. This mix will work for succulents as well! For humid weather clay pots might work better than plastic.
I went back to using soil from the desert
What climate are you in? The dad mention “my climate” a lot but where in USA ? Thanks.
We are located in Southern California with a Mediterranean climate!
Aww nice. So like the best place to grow cacti, this is coming from someone in south east England.
I use the same mix with all my cactus including the ariocarpus and they seem fine. Cactus quest did a vid recently and he said his ario roots were still wet or moist after 1 week. I think the reason ur stuff rotted is that brown sand (?) It seems to be all around the root which probs caused it to suffocate
Its loamy soil works fine in the desert but not here stays wet too long I think.
update. yes ariocarpus seem to be water hogs. completely sucking my pots dry at the moment. no idea if im doing it right!
Ariocarpus rot if watered when its not hot. They live in a hot desert with summer rain and dry winters.
I got a hold of some toxic soil from the field it wasn't good and I don't know what exactly. Not good
What is, sifted organic. People keep saying add mineral. What is it actually called so I can buy some?
to add mineral, azomite is a good option. As for sifted organic, that is something you would have to do yourself. For a lot of our plants we use very little organic
Fantastic video. I have some question if I may,
1. Why do you not use sand at all? It is a cheap material in general and pure mineral. I observed that in large amounts tend to get really hard.
2. The rocks that you use are river rocks or something like that?
3. Do you like loamy or gypsum-like soils for Arios?
Sand is ok make sure to use sand of mixed sizes so it stays open. River rock no I think its crushed rock scrap from home Depot sold in bags
Mineral.based soils for ariocarpus but many growers use organic works fine in AZ desert
Probably cause orange rot anywhere else
You can propagate tubercles of ariocarpus. Or you can cut them off.
We haven’t tried that yet, good idea
Nice shirt mr cactus duty :)
Great ideas on preventing root rot😌🙌🌟I think hydrogen peroxide does a good job killing bacteria on a struggling cactus and really cleans up wounds and fungal issues
We use hydrogen peroxide too! We just use it mostly on seedlings
Most root rot can be prevented if you use plastic pots and drill more drain holes all around the bottom of the pot instead of one little teeny drain hole at the bottom soil aeration is the most important part of preventing root rot also filling the pot with soil all the way to the top is incorrect there should be at least an inch or inch and a half of finish grade in the pot
Finish grade means what? small rocks around neck of the plant then yes . I find clay pots work best for old desert cactus with tuberous roots and plastic if you can find plastic that is durable works for regular cactus and succulents.
Lots of people buy expensive ceramic pots for valuable cactus how they eventually transplant I don't know. I use a hammer on terra cotta works well😅
Are those Godzilla’s where can I buy one?
No just normal fissuratus
In my oppinion
Why they’re rot is caused by the water are so alkaline, naturally cacti like acid water. U need to test ur water pH if its more than 7.5 and use for watering offcoursly they will die slowly
We use vinegar in our water to get the ph to 6. 7 being neutral. Yea high ph water not good especially in all mineral.soils no buffer in mineral soils.
Try using only pumice (without organic! may be instead about 10% zeolite), use dilluted cactus fertilizer with each watering and you will be surprised by the result.
I'm doing exactly that for almost all my plants. Only pumice, no soil at all. So far so good!