Holiday cactuses aren't what I've learned
- Shule
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- Location: SW Idaho, USA
Holiday cactuses aren't what I've learned
I just learned today that what I grew up thinking was a Christmas cactus is actually a Thanksgiving cactus, and what I grew up thinking was an Easter cactus is actually a Christmas cactus. I don't think I've ever actually met a real Easter cactus.
So, here's the guide to telling what you have:
* If there are pointy things on segments, it's a Thanksgiving cactus.
* If there aren't pointy things on the segments, but the flowers look very similar in shape to those of a Thanksgiving cactus, it's a Christmas cactus.
* If the flowers look kind of spiky and interesting, and the segments don't have pointy things, it's probably an Easter cactus.
To complicate matters, there are at least three types of Christmas cactus (and I don't mean the flower color), and at least a few kinds of cactuses that look like holiday cactuses, but I'm not sure if they are holiday cactuses.
To complicate matters further, you can hybridize the different species together, so you might actually have a hybrid instead of a pure Thanksgiving, Christmas, or Easter cactus.
Supposedly, it's easy to pollinate them, get fruit, and breed them! It takes about a year for the fruit to ripen, however.
Now, maybe you're wondering why people keep calling Thanksgiving cactuses Christmas cactuses (it's not just me). Well, it's probably because they sell them as Christmas cactuses (and they prepare them so they'll bloom at Christmas the year you buy them).
None of that explains why my Christmas cactus (that I thought was an Easter cactus) blooms for Easter, though. One of our Thanksgiving cactuses blooms for Thanksgiving. My other one bloomed for Christmas this last time (but it bloomed all year, once, one to three flowers at a time; usually just one).
One of my Thanksgiving cactuses is a lot more succulent than the other (it flowers pink), but the other is a much darker green (and flowers red).
So, here's the guide to telling what you have:
* If there are pointy things on segments, it's a Thanksgiving cactus.
* If there aren't pointy things on the segments, but the flowers look very similar in shape to those of a Thanksgiving cactus, it's a Christmas cactus.
* If the flowers look kind of spiky and interesting, and the segments don't have pointy things, it's probably an Easter cactus.
To complicate matters, there are at least three types of Christmas cactus (and I don't mean the flower color), and at least a few kinds of cactuses that look like holiday cactuses, but I'm not sure if they are holiday cactuses.
To complicate matters further, you can hybridize the different species together, so you might actually have a hybrid instead of a pure Thanksgiving, Christmas, or Easter cactus.
Supposedly, it's easy to pollinate them, get fruit, and breed them! It takes about a year for the fruit to ripen, however.
Now, maybe you're wondering why people keep calling Thanksgiving cactuses Christmas cactuses (it's not just me). Well, it's probably because they sell them as Christmas cactuses (and they prepare them so they'll bloom at Christmas the year you buy them).
None of that explains why my Christmas cactus (that I thought was an Easter cactus) blooms for Easter, though. One of our Thanksgiving cactuses blooms for Thanksgiving. My other one bloomed for Christmas this last time (but it bloomed all year, once, one to three flowers at a time; usually just one).
One of my Thanksgiving cactuses is a lot more succulent than the other (it flowers pink), but the other is a much darker green (and flowers red).
Location: SW Idaho, USA
Climate: BSk
USDA hardiness zone: 6
Elevation: 2,260 feet
Climate: BSk
USDA hardiness zone: 6
Elevation: 2,260 feet
- SpookyShoe
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Re: Holiday cactuses aren't what I've learned
Does this help?
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Donna, zone 9, El Lago, Texas
- peebee
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Re: Holiday cactuses aren't what I've learned
That's helpful [mention]SpookyShoe[/mention] 

Zone 10, Southern California
Will eat anything once before I judge.
Anything meaning any foods of course.
Will eat anything once before I judge.
Anything meaning any foods of course.
- Nan6b
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Re: Holiday cactuses aren't what I've learned
For years we had one that bloomed at Christmas when we bought it, then switched to blooming on Thanksgiving AND Easter. If you can breed in multiple bloom times, why not breed a 3-season bloomer?
- rdback
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Re: Holiday cactuses aren't what I've learned
Interesting post!
I was looking [mention]SpookyShoe[/mention] 's post, and comparing the hand drawings to the actual photos. I think the Christmas and the Easter photos are flipped. The Christmas photo has the rounded leaf shoulder of the Easter drawing, and the Easter photo has the blunt-point shoulder of the Christmas drawing.
I know it's probably just me, but now I know how to tell them apart! (Maybe lol)
I was looking [mention]SpookyShoe[/mention] 's post, and comparing the hand drawings to the actual photos. I think the Christmas and the Easter photos are flipped. The Christmas photo has the rounded leaf shoulder of the Easter drawing, and the Easter photo has the blunt-point shoulder of the Christmas drawing.
I know it's probably just me, but now I know how to tell them apart! (Maybe lol)
- Shule
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- Location: SW Idaho, USA
Re: Holiday cactuses aren't what I've learned
[mention]rdback[/mention]
The exact shape probably depends on the kinds of Christmas and Easter cactuses we're talking about, is my guess.
The exact shape probably depends on the kinds of Christmas and Easter cactuses we're talking about, is my guess.
Location: SW Idaho, USA
Climate: BSk
USDA hardiness zone: 6
Elevation: 2,260 feet
Climate: BSk
USDA hardiness zone: 6
Elevation: 2,260 feet
- SpookyShoe
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- Location: Zone 9, Texas Gulf Coast near Houston
Re: Holiday cactuses aren't what I've learned
These are Easter cacti. Saw them today. Spiky blooms.
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Last edited by SpookyShoe on Mon Apr 19, 2021 7:16 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Donna, zone 9, El Lago, Texas
- Julianna
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Re: Holiday cactuses aren't what I've learned
So there is Schlumbergera truncata, which has a bloom window from October to January, then Schlumbergera x buckleyii has a window from December through March, and then Schlumbergera gaertneri, fka Hatiora gaertneri, which has a window from Feb- May or so. Sg has way bigger phylloclades which makes it more distinctive than It would seem by those pictures. Schlumbergera x buckleyii is actually a cross between truncata and S. russeliana.
-julianna
10a Monterey Bay
Lover of Fogust, tomatoes, flowers, and pumpkins
10a Monterey Bay
Lover of Fogust, tomatoes, flowers, and pumpkins