Love the way you differentiate the soil mix depending on the surrounding. That's one of my greatest challenge since I'm currently leaving in Holland. Thank you. 😊
There is no best soil mix. It really depends on the environment and watering habit. You can adjust it depending on your microclimate. Thank you at Ingat po diyan.
Muchas felicidades, tu explicación es excelente!! Me encantó que explicaras el por qué de cada ingrediente y que la mezcla depende de varios aspectos, como el clima, el tipo y la edad de los cactus. Gracias!!
This guide is excellent, because it explains the mix very simply and discusses the elements in their real essence instead of requiring specific components that adds to the confusing (such as requiring regular potting mix as an element in some guides which is CONFUSING). Thanks a lot. I am now your loyal follower 🥰
I understand that not everyone has access with the same materials/components. That’s why as much as possible I’ll try to make a guide wherein people could make and experiment on their own.
bro, do not forget that the roots of astrophytum and hymnocalycium are prone to decay ... they are suitable for a mineral substrate .. thanks for the video
Hi, I've only just found your site. Fascinating information. I've just started to collect again after 30 years, there are so many options available now and so many interesting species available. I'm going to start to sow seeds from a number of potentially tricky species. I'm going to grow in sealed pots, another new method to me. Could you please suggest mixes for the following species and your thoughts on preventing mould from killing the seedlings. the species are Geohintonia, Aztekium, both genera that hadn't even been described when I last grew. Matucana and all species of Lophophora. I'm uncertain as to whether there is a single approach to all species in this genus Apologies for the extensive question. Having watched several of your videos and being very impressed by your plants I'm just hoping for trustworthy understandings. I live in the UK. The seeds will be sown in sealed pots in a warmed container inside the house with an LED light and a shade screen. I do have a fungicide containing copper oxychloride. I'd read an article suggesting having a weak solution as the water for soaking the compost for sowing. I'm just concerned about mould killing the seedlings in the sealed environments. Alternatively another suggested watching for fungus and then spraying with this fungicide or 3% hydrogen peroxide. Sorry for such an extensive query. I just want the best results. Many thanks if you can provide guidance. .
Hello, sorry for the late reply. I was in vacation for the past months. I use the same soil mix for all the seeds. To prevent molds, make sure to sterilize or sanitize the soil mix that you will be using. You could sterilize it by heating the soil mix. For the seeds, you could dip then in a solution of hydrogen peroxide a 1:1 solution is okay. You could also spray some fungicide, just use a weaker fungicide.
Extremely precise and helpful. I suspected my tap water was not beneficial because my pots and so much ugly residue. Going to keep distilled water in supply👍🏻
Thank you! I’m glad my video was helpful. You could also try catching rainwater. Cactus love rainwater, and it also washes the salts that accumulates overtime.
Hello there. May i know, does this soil mix suitable for other succulent? ( Cactus + succulent + aloe). Other person already asked, but didn't mention about aloe type. 2nd question, how diatomaceous earth was used? I saw on your succulent soil mix, you mix it up inside the soil mix. But, how frequently it must be apply? Thank you. Such an informative video with brief explanation. Thank you for this superb information.👍
Yes, you could use it and tweak it a little bit. The common thing about cactus, soft succulents, and aloes soil mix is they have to be well draining. Just add more organic for aloes and succulents. I only put diatomaceous earth once. It eould be good until I repot the cactus.
I haven’t. But if you’re planning to make a soilmix for cactus under full rain and sun. You should add more inoraganic materials (pumice, lava rock). Thank you for watching! 🤗
I live in Canada and have a Cephalocereus Senilis that is about 3 years old I keep indoors during the winter near a window facing East. Lately it has started to turn brown on the body and some of the hairs. I’d like to repot it and start with a good soil mixture. I’d also like to have the right fertilizer for it. What do you recommend. I also plan to take it outside this summer and don’t know where to place it. Full sun/ partial shade? Thank you for all the great information in your videos!
If the browning is hard. It is probably corking. Old cactus or tall cactus usually have corking to support their weight. This is very evident for top heavy cacti like columnar cactus or large barrel cactus. A potting mix with at least 70% inorganic will work. I’m not sure what are the aggregates available in your area, but the 70% could be a mixture of pumice, scoria, lava rock, turface, perlite, decomposed granite, akadama, or any material that could improve the potting mix drainage. For the 30% you could use any soilless potting mix, or any potting mix you have. For the fertilizer, AICL osmocote is nice since it is a slow release fertilizer. This controlled-release feature provides a consistent and gradual supply of essential nutrients to the cactus, promoting steady growth and minimizing the risk of over-fertilization. Cephalocereus senilis can handle full sun since it has hairs that covers it. But since it is from indoor, you have to gradually introduce it to sun. Probably add 1 hour every 5 days. For example, Day 1-5, it will receive 1 hour of direct sunlight. Day 6-10, it will receive 2 hours Day 11-15, it will receive 3 hours Day 16-20, it will receive 4 hours And so on, until it can handle full sun.
Hello question here. I bought a cactus soil mixture and the bag said it had peat moss, perlite and slow released fertilizer and it is slightly alkaline and I bought cocopeat, pumice and akadama separately. I use one cup of cactus soil mixture, one cup of cocopeat, two cups of pumice and akadama on top. Is this acceptable?
I have a guide for Gymnocalycium care, I think I have mentioned my potting mix there. But right now, I am just using 7 parts pumice, 1 part coco peat, 1 part peat moss, and 1 part carbonized rice hull.
I have a Lophophora fricii and I’m using the same soil mix I use for my Astrophytum (I already have a video about it) so far it works well for my Lopho. Lot’s of sunlight, higher temperature (but not scorching hot and under uv plastic sheet), watering thoroughly but infrequently (don’t let their soil mix get super bone dry), and adding fertilizer. Also repot and roottrim the cactus once every 2-4 years depending in the size of your cactus.
You can use crushed charcoal. But you can also use other organic components that are available in your place such as leaf compost, tree bark, regular potting mix.
hello again lord Kim... i put my astro under direct sun without any uv plastic from 07.00 am till 14.00 pm ... im in indonesia... is it bad? i keep watering them every 2 or 3 days because the sun is really hot these days
Hi again, If you want their skin to look beautiful, UV plastic shade is needed. But if you don’t have one, you can expose them in morning sunlight and afternoon sunlight, avoid noon wherein the sun is intense. Direct sunlight especially (11:00 AM - 3:00 PM) is way too harsh for their skin especially for ‘nudum’ cultivars. Regarding watering, you can water them as long as their soilmix is dry. There are times that I water them twice a week during summer. Just make sure to have a well draining soilmix.
@@theplantprinceph yes sir... i keep watching your entire video everynight before sleep.. over and over again.. but still i need to experiment on myself...
You don’t have to use all the ingredients. Just find some aggregates/ inorganic soil components that is available in your are. You could try lava rock, or turface if pumice is not available. Though I highly suggest pumice, you could skip akadama and perlite as long as you have pumice.
Hello po. Mahahanap niyo po lahat ng gamit sa paggawa ng soilmix na ito sa Shopee. Ito po ‘yung link para mas mabilis niyo mahanap: mycollection.shop/plantprinceph
@@entree48 If you’re from the Philippines, I bought them from Shopee. The link is in the description. If you’re outside of the Philippines, you can check Alibaba and search for tall slender pots. These pots were from China.
@@theplantprinceph thank you, i'm from america so hopefully alibaba has those in stock, what soil mix would you recommend for uebelmannia which was shown in the video? and thank you for the fast responses
@@entree48 Hello, you could use this general cactus soil mix: - 2 parts inorganic (any of the following or a mixture of these: pumice, perlite or lava rock) - 1 part organic (you could use your regular potting mix or you can mix your own, just mix equal parts of cocopeat, peatmoss, and carbonized rice hull) My exact cactus recipe is 4 parts pumice, 2 parts lava rock, 1 part cocopeat, 1 part peatmoss, and 1 part carbonized rice hull. I understand that not all of these ingredients are available in your area, thus, you could always substitute.
This ingredient available in my region iam from india 1.washed cinder 2.pumice 3.peat moss 4.vermiculie 5.coco peat 6.perlite 7.cow or goat manure Now i want know what suggiest to select from this
Do you have your own cactus soil mix recipe? Feel free to share it. You could also add where you live or a short description of your climate. So other people in your place or with the same climate may have an idea on how they can make their own cactus soil mix.
The materials/components I used are cheap in our place. A 1 sack of pumice only cost less than 1 USD in our place. I gave more than 10 different components/materials that you can use. You don’t need to follow my recipe strictly, you can use whatever is availabe or cheap in your area.
Love the way you differentiate the soil mix depending on the surrounding. That's one of my greatest challenge since I'm currently leaving in Holland. Thank you. 😊
There is no best soil mix. It really depends on the environment and watering habit. You can adjust it depending on your microclimate. Thank you at Ingat po diyan.
Full of information! I enjoyed watching. 👍🏼😊🌵☕️
Muchas felicidades, tu explicación es excelente!! Me encantó que explicaras el por qué de cada ingrediente y que la mezcla depende de varios aspectos, como el clima, el tipo y la edad de los cactus.
Gracias!!
Thank you! I’m glad you find the video helpful.
This guide is excellent, because it explains the mix very simply and discusses the elements in their real essence instead of requiring specific components that adds to the confusing (such as requiring regular potting mix as an element in some guides which is CONFUSING).
Thanks a lot. I am now your loyal follower
🥰
Thank you so much! I appreciate your comment and your support.
I understand that not everyone has access with the same materials/components. That’s why as much as possible I’ll try to make a guide wherein people could make and experiment on their own.
Thank you for your effort to make brief explanation about the medium use for the soil. Thumbs up!
Glad it was helpful! Thank you for watching!
Very well explained Wonderful
Glad it was helpful!
bro, do not forget that the roots of astrophytum and hymnocalycium are prone to decay ... they are suitable for a mineral substrate .. thanks for the video
Thank you also.
@@theplantprinceph ❤🌵👍
I really enjoy your videos. It shows that you take great care in the things that you do.
I appreciate that! Thank you for watching and for your support!
Closed Captions / English Subtitles are available for convenience and for those who prefer reading while watching. Enjoy!
Türkiye'den selâm sizi yeni keşfettim.Bazi videolarınızın türkçe altyazısı yok bu konuda yardımcı olurmusunuz.Teşekkürler
laking tulong ng page mo idol salamat ☺️☺️☺️😯 happy planting 😊😊
Maraming salamat din po sa panonood at suporta! 🙂
Wonderfully explained.
Glad it was helpful! Thank you for watching! 🤗
Hi, I've only just found your site. Fascinating information. I've just started to collect again after 30 years, there are so many options available now and so many interesting species available. I'm going to start to sow seeds from a number of potentially tricky species. I'm going to grow in sealed pots, another new method to me. Could you please suggest mixes for the following species and your thoughts on preventing mould from killing the seedlings.
the species are Geohintonia, Aztekium, both genera that hadn't even been described when I last grew.
Matucana and all species of Lophophora. I'm uncertain as to whether there is a single approach to all species in this genus
Apologies for the extensive question. Having watched several of your videos and being very impressed by your plants I'm just hoping for trustworthy understandings.
I live in the UK. The seeds will be sown in sealed pots in a warmed container inside the house with an LED light and a shade screen.
I do have a fungicide containing copper oxychloride. I'd read an article suggesting having a weak solution as the water for soaking the compost for sowing. I'm just concerned about mould killing the seedlings in the sealed environments. Alternatively another suggested watching for fungus and then spraying with this fungicide or 3% hydrogen peroxide. Sorry for such an extensive query. I just want the best results.
Many thanks if you can provide guidance.
.
Hello, sorry for the late reply. I was in vacation for the past months.
I use the same soil mix for all the seeds. To prevent molds, make sure to sterilize or sanitize the soil mix that you will be using. You could sterilize it by heating the soil mix. For the seeds, you could dip then in a solution of hydrogen peroxide a 1:1 solution is okay. You could also spray some fungicide, just use a weaker fungicide.
Excellent video!!!
Glad you liked it! Thank you for watching.
Best cactus/succulent diy mix.
Thank you! 🤗
Great video! I hope you get many more subscribers - you deserve it!
I’m glad you like it. Thank you so much! I appreciate it.
Gracias por compartir tus experiencias, exitos y bendiciones...
Thank you for watching! 🤗
Great video.
Thank you 😊
You are one of the best❤
Thank you so much! I really appreciate it. 🙂
Nice! Well explained.
Thank you! I appreciate your feedback.
Хороший контент. Аргументированно и подробно.
I’m glad you like it. Thank you so much!
Wow.. So informative!! 😍😍
Glad it was helpful! Thank you! 🤗
Extremely precise and helpful. I suspected my tap water was not beneficial because my pots and so much ugly residue. Going to keep distilled water in supply👍🏻
Thank you! I’m glad my video was helpful. You could also try catching rainwater. Cactus love rainwater, and it also washes the salts that accumulates overtime.
Excellent information ☺️
Glad it was helpful! Thank you for watching 🤗
Great video 😊 I can't get rice hull. Could it be substituted with worm castings ?
Yes. You can use anything that is available in your area.
Hello there. May i know, does this soil mix suitable for other succulent? ( Cactus + succulent + aloe). Other person already asked, but didn't mention about aloe type.
2nd question, how diatomaceous earth was used? I saw on your succulent soil mix, you mix it up inside the soil mix. But, how frequently it must be apply?
Thank you. Such an informative video with brief explanation. Thank you for this superb information.👍
Yes, you could use it and tweak it a little bit. The common thing about cactus, soft succulents, and aloes soil mix is they have to be well draining. Just add more organic for aloes and succulents.
I only put diatomaceous earth once. It eould be good until I repot the cactus.
Great video--expert advice! : )
Glad it was helpful! Thank you for watching and for your support 😊
thank you for the awesome videos
Glad you like them! Thank you for watching!
Insteand of carbonized rice hull should i use cow manure or goat manure
Thank you for this video! Very informative and detailed. Just curious if you have had the chance to use this soil mix in full rain and sun?
I haven’t. But if you’re planning to make a soilmix for cactus under full rain and sun. You should add more inoraganic materials (pumice, lava rock).
Thank you for watching! 🤗
I live in Canada and have a Cephalocereus Senilis that is about 3 years old I keep indoors during the winter near a window facing East. Lately it has started to turn brown on the body and some of the hairs. I’d like to repot it and start with a good soil mixture. I’d also like to have the right fertilizer for it. What do you recommend. I also plan to take it outside this summer and don’t know where to place it. Full sun/ partial shade?
Thank you for all the great information in your videos!
If the browning is hard. It is probably corking. Old cactus or tall cactus usually have corking to support their weight. This is very evident for top heavy cacti like columnar cactus or large barrel cactus.
A potting mix with at least 70% inorganic will work. I’m not sure what are the aggregates available in your area, but the 70% could be a mixture of pumice, scoria, lava rock, turface, perlite, decomposed granite, akadama, or any material that could improve the potting mix drainage. For the 30% you could use any soilless potting mix, or any potting mix you have.
For the fertilizer, AICL osmocote is nice since it is a slow release fertilizer. This controlled-release feature provides a consistent and gradual supply of essential nutrients to the cactus, promoting steady growth and minimizing the risk of over-fertilization.
Cephalocereus senilis can handle full sun since it has hairs that covers it. But since it is from indoor, you have to gradually introduce it to sun. Probably add 1 hour every 5 days. For example,
Day 1-5, it will receive 1 hour of direct sunlight.
Day 6-10, it will receive 2 hours
Day 11-15, it will receive 3 hours
Day 16-20, it will receive 4 hours
And so on, until it can handle full sun.
Hello question here. I bought a cactus soil mixture and the bag said it had peat moss, perlite and slow released fertilizer and it is slightly alkaline and I bought cocopeat, pumice and akadama separately. I use one cup of cactus soil mixture, one cup of cocopeat, two cups of pumice and akadama on top. Is this acceptable?
What is your best mix for Gymnocalyciums? Thanks.
I have a guide for Gymnocalycium care, I think I have mentioned my potting mix there. But right now, I am just using 7 parts pumice, 1 part coco peat, 1 part peat moss, and 1 part carbonized rice hull.
Am watching after my question in one of the pseudolithos videos
I hope this video helped you! Thank you for watching! 🤗
from where can I buy Gymnocalycium Variegated multicoloured cactus seeds. Can you give some good suppliers
Great reasoning!
Thanks!
What is your advice on lopho william cacti soil mix? And is there any way to make chubby round cacti grow as fast as possible?
I have a Lophophora fricii and I’m using the same soil mix I use for my Astrophytum (I already have a video about it) so far it works well for my Lopho. Lot’s of sunlight, higher temperature (but not scorching hot and under uv plastic sheet), watering thoroughly but infrequently (don’t let their soil mix get super bone dry), and adding fertilizer. Also repot and roottrim the cactus once every 2-4 years depending in the size of your cactus.
Hi thank you first of all for the info do you have a mix that you use for ariocarpus?
For Lophophora and Ariocarpus, I just use my Astrophytum soil mix.
Thank you!
You're welcome! And thank you for watching!
Can i do this: cocopeat, vermicast, CRH = 1 part them mix with 2 parts pumice?
Yes, you can experiment and make your own. Just keep in mind that the soilmix should drain the water well.
Thank you for watching!
Thank you for the informative video. Please also suggest media for EUPHORBIAS.
I only have a few Euphorbias, and their potting mix is 7 parts pumice, 1 part cocopeat, 1 part peatmoss, and 1 part carbonized rice hull.
What can be substituted for rice husk
You can use crushed charcoal. But you can also use other organic components that are available in your place such as leaf compost, tree bark, regular potting mix.
can i use construction gravel as an inorganic component?
Yes you can. Just make sure it is clean.
I would wash it before using it in the mix as they can contain a lot of salt (I know this to be the case in my area at least)
In what proportion do you recommend diatomaceous soil?
I mix sparingly amount around 0.25 part for every 10 parts of soil mix, since too much may affect the soil pH.
Thanks, i learn a lot whit your videos
What kind of soil mix should I use since my cactus are exposed to sun and rain with net of 70%. Thanks
Is cultured soil good for astrophytum asteria?
I haven’t use that brand of soil mix. But you could try.
Do you ever use sand friend?
Hi, I don’t use sand since it is not easily available in my place.
hello again lord Kim... i put my astro under direct sun without any uv plastic from 07.00 am till 14.00 pm ... im in indonesia... is it bad? i keep watering them every 2 or 3 days because the sun is really hot these days
Hi again,
If you want their skin to look beautiful, UV plastic shade is needed. But if you don’t have one, you can expose them in morning sunlight and afternoon sunlight, avoid noon wherein the sun is intense. Direct sunlight especially (11:00 AM - 3:00 PM) is way too harsh for their skin especially for ‘nudum’ cultivars.
Regarding watering, you can water them as long as their soilmix is dry. There are times that I water them twice a week during summer. Just make sure to have a well draining soilmix.
@@theplantprinceph yes sir... i keep watching your entire video everynight before sleep.. over and over again.. but still i need to experiment on myself...
Can i use this mixture for my succulents?
Yes, you could.
Thanks for your reply.
🎉Thanks ...keep going👍
Watching from Philippines11-20-2024🥰👍
That's interesting that you don't use any limestone. Many Mexican cactus species grow in limestone rubble. Some grow in gypsum.
It’s hard to find limestone here. And I find that cactus grow faster in pumice or lavarock.
I am in sri lanka, it is difficult to find pumice, akadama, perlite, what are the substitutes that can be used instead?
Did you try buying them online?
You don’t have to use all the ingredients. Just find some aggregates/ inorganic soil components that is available in your are. You could try lava rock, or turface if pumice is not available. Though I highly suggest pumice, you could skip akadama and perlite as long as you have pumice.
@@theplantprinceph Thanks you very much❤️
san po makakbili ng ganyang soil?Thank you
Hello po. Mahahanap niyo po lahat ng gamit sa paggawa ng soilmix na ito sa Shopee. Ito po ‘yung link para mas mabilis niyo mahanap: mycollection.shop/plantprinceph
would this work for uebelmannia?
Yes
@@theplantprinceph also where do you get your pots, they're gorgeous
@@entree48 If you’re from the Philippines, I bought them from Shopee. The link is in the description. If you’re outside of the Philippines, you can check Alibaba and search for tall slender pots. These pots were from China.
@@theplantprinceph thank you, i'm from america so hopefully alibaba has those in stock, what soil mix would you recommend for uebelmannia which was shown in the video? and thank you for the fast responses
@@entree48 Hello, you could use this general cactus soil mix:
- 2 parts inorganic (any of the following or a mixture of these: pumice, perlite or lava rock)
- 1 part organic (you could use your regular potting mix or you can mix your own, just mix equal parts of cocopeat, peatmoss, and carbonized rice hull)
My exact cactus recipe is 4 parts pumice, 2 parts lava rock, 1 part cocopeat, 1 part peatmoss, and 1 part carbonized rice hull. I understand that not all of these ingredients are available in your area, thus, you could always substitute.
This ingredient available in my region iam from india
1.washed cinder
2.pumice
3.peat moss
4.vermiculie
5.coco peat
6.perlite
7.cow or goat manure
Now i want know what suggiest to select from this
Bro reply me
Kim do you sell your cactus?
Hello, I’m sorry. I don’t sell seeds nor plants outside the Philippines.
@@theplantprinceph oh man :( 😢
Do you have your own cactus soil mix recipe? Feel free to share it. You could also add where you live or a short description of your climate. So other people in your place or with the same climate may have an idea on how they can make their own cactus soil mix.
What do you do with old and used soil mixture?
Thank you!! Super!! 👏🏻👏🏻🫱🏻🫲🏼👍🏻👍🏻
Welcome! Thank you for watching! 🙂
Well thats alot of effort and expensive
Upfront but compared to other plants in the long run are cheaper.
You're wrong.
There are almost 10 different elements that you can use in this guide, choose the cheapest available one.
The materials/components I used are cheap in our place. A 1 sack of pumice only cost less than 1 USD in our place.
I gave more than 10 different components/materials that you can use. You don’t need to follow my recipe strictly, you can use whatever is availabe or cheap in your area.