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beatnikcrab

I'm mostly into cacti, aloes, and other heat tolerant succulents, and more recently hoyas and some tropicals. Phoenix, AZ. USDA zone 9b, heat zone 11.

  • Season Icon Late AutumnLate Autumn 2020
  • 9
  • 5
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Euphorbia lactea f. cristata

  • Season Icon Late AutumnLate Autumn 2020
  • Like Count 9
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beatnikcrab

Here's a close-up of the bizarre rot infecting my mom's crested euphorbia. The flesh goes squishy and then dries back after a couple days. The core goes soft, but fibrous and ashen. When I initially prepared the cuttings the flesh was white and supple and appeared in every way viable. These are the 4th and 5th cuttings that I've taken from this plant over the past year, and they've all done the exact same thing. I'm at a loss! 😭 Thoughts??

4w
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savannahssucculentgarden

Are you grafting them yourself?

4w
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docthrill

Looks like mold. Maybe over watered. Looks like a goner, but then I’ve never had a coral cactus before. I’ve had other cactus do just the same and I definitely over watered it. I was just learning succulents and cactus then

4w
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beatnikcrab

@docthrill it's my mom's plant, and she never uses appropriate succulent soil or pays much attention to dormancy seasons, so there's definitely a rot/overwatering situation going on. What I can't figure out is why it's so persistent throughout the plant even though I'd cut it back to healthy flesh. @savannahssucculentgarden I was planning on rooting it, but not grafting. Idk why these are always sold grafted. I like them much better growing naturally, and they get much larger that way.

4w
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emch

#interestingfoliage

4w