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Cacti in Bloom

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By Chuck


The Desert Blooms in Spring

Mention deserts and the image that comes to mind for many is a hot dry land with a barren and desolate landscape that is covered with sand and is almost totally lacking in vegetation.

While this image may be true for some desert areas in the world, such as the Sahara Desert in North Africa or the Gobi Desert in Asia, it is a far from accurate description of America's southwestern desert areas. While the desert areas that extend over much of Arizona and New Mexico as well as parts of California and Texas tend to be hot, especially in summer, and full of sand they are anything but barren.

With few exceptings, such as the white sand area of the White Sands National Monument in New Mexico which is mostly barren white sand with very little vegetation (however it is a spectacularly beautiful sight, but the actual white sand is only found within the relatively small area of the National Monument while the rest of White Sands -  the White Sands Missile Range - supports a relative abundance of desert plant an animal life) and the Death Valley area of California which are mostly barren, the desert areas of the American Southwest do support a fair number of plants an animals that thave adapted to the dry desert environment.


Cactus is King

While not known for the lush vegitation or thick forests that predominate in the eastern states of the United States, the southwestern deserts do have an abundance of their own unique vegetation.

In a previous Hub, entitled Springtime in the Arizona Deseert, I described how the winter rains bring forth an abundance of wildflowers that blanket the desert landscape in the spring.  While hardy, most of the plants that bear these flowers cannot handle the intense summer heat of the desert so they tend to sprout and bloom early in the spring when the temperatures are lower and water more abundant.

However, as the wildflowers wither and die in the increasing heat of late spring, the mainstays of the desert, the cactus and other succulent plants thrive and bloom during late spring and early summer.  Unlike the wildflower plants which need a supply of water in the ground to survive, cacti and their succulent cousins have, over the ages, evolved in ways that have allowed them to adapt to the hot and dry desert climate by holding moisture in and consuming it sparingly.

Since these plants are able to survive in the hot dry desert climate, they can afford to wait and bloom later in the spring when the days are becoming hotter.  Just as the widflowers put on a spectacular show of beauty when they bloom so too do the cacti and other succulents so that the desert is again awash in floral beauty.


Prickley Pear in Bloom

Prickley Pear Cactus

The Prickley Pear is a common cactus that is found in many parts of the world.

It flowers in the spring and after the flower dies a fruit is produced which can be consumed by humans.  The fruit is often made into a jam.  Tourist shops in the southwest often carry prickley pear jam as one of their offerings.

The broad flat leaves of this cactus can also be cut up, boiled and eaten as a vegetable.  These leaves are sometimes served with Mexican meals and are in sufficient demand among some consumers in Tucson that many grocery stores carry these leaves in their fresh produce section.

I have tried the leaves on a couple occasions at pot luck luncheons at work and they have a taste and consistancy similar to that of boiled green beans.


Another Variety of Prickley Pear Cactus

Complete Book of Cacti & Succulents Complete Book of Cacti & Succulents
Price: $11.11
List Price: $20.00
500 Cacti: Species and Varieties in Cultivation 500 Cacti: Species and Varieties in Cultivation
Price: $13.49
List Price: $29.95
The Cactus Family The Cactus Family
Price: $62.97
List Price: $99.95
Living Stones 10 Seeds Living Stones 10 Seeds
Price: $3.95

More Prickly Pear Flowers


Saguaro Cacti

Even the Mighty Saguaro Cacti Break into Bloom in Spring

While various species of cactus can be found in desert and dry areas around the world, the saguaro is only found in the Sonoran Desert which stretches across parts of Arizona and California in the U.S. and parts of the Mexican states of Sonora and Baja California.  Thanks in large part to old west cowboy movies the saguaro cactus has become widely known and closely associated with the American West despite the fact that the Saguaro is only found in a small part of the West.

During late spring and early summer, the saguaro produces white or red flowers.  The flowers produce a fruit which is popular with birds and bugs and is also harvested by the local Tohono O'odham indians in June and July and made into wine for their centuries rain ceremony.

Despite their natural majestic beauty and the way they beautify the Arizona landscape throughout the year, their flowering adds additional beauty to spring time in the desert.


Tohono O'odham Harvesting Saguaro Fruit

The Saguaro Cacti Incubator Kit The Saguaro Cacti Incubator Kit
Price: $5.95
List Price: $5.95
Saguaro Cactus (Habitats) Saguaro Cactus (Habitats)
Price: $6.94
List Price: $6.95
Pomegranate Frank Lloyd Wright: Saguaro Glass Designs 1000 Piece Jigsaw Puzzle Pomegranate Frank Lloyd Wright: Saguaro Glass Designs 1000 Piece Jigsaw Puzzle
Price: $15.00
List Price: $17.99
Lodge Logic Pre-Seasoned Saguaro Cactus Pan Lodge Logic Pre-Seasoned Saguaro Cactus Pan
Price: $14.99
List Price: $20.99

Saguro Fruit for Birds and Humans

Other Cacti Flower As Well

Thelocactus Cactus - a very small cactus (4 to 5 inches in height) with white prickers that look like fur.
Thelocactus Cactus - a very small cactus (4 to 5 inches in height) with white prickers that look like fur.
Thelocactus Cactus
Thelocactus Cactus
Star Cactus in Bloom
Star Cactus in Bloom
Cactoceae Cactus
Cactoceae Cactus
Cholla Cactus
Cholla Cactus
Another variety of Prickley Pear Cactus
Another variety of Prickley Pear Cactus
Star Cactus
Star Cactus

Spanish Bayonete

Other Succulent Plants

Cacti are not the only plants designed by nature to survive in the desert.  There are other plants which, like cacti, are designed to store and use water sparingly thereby ensuring their survival in the harsh dry climate of the desert. 

Like Cacti, these succulent cousins also burst forth in bloom every spring.  Here is a sampling of some of these plants.

Ocotillo

Descriptive sign in succulent garden section of Tucson Botanical Gardens
Descriptive sign in succulent garden section of Tucson Botanical Gardens
Ocotillo in bloom along Finger Rock hiking trail in Tucson
Ocotillo in bloom along Finger Rock hiking trail in Tucson

Spring in the News

  • Cacti/Succulents Book ReviewBellaOnline2 days ago

    In addition to gardening books, cacti and succulent growers will find regional books on plants are very useful. Texas A & M University Press has released a very helpful title.

  • Preserving your Christmas plantsThe Yuma Sun10 hours ago

    Four common seasonal gift plants for Christmas are the poinsettia, rosemary tree, Christmas cactus, and amaryllis. Each can be preserved and the three flowering ones brought back to bloom.

  • December 28, 2009Idaho State Journal3 days ago

    Posted: Monday, December 28, 2009 12:15 am | Updated: 9:34 am, Mon Dec 28, 2009.

  • Garden workshops offer wisdom from the ground upNaples Daily News6 days ago

    Collier County Master Gardeners Program and the Collier County Extension Service have announced their list of public classes for 2010, and there’s some straightforward education for every plant lover in Southwest Florida on it.Classes this year range from the familiar vegetable gardening and container growing to turf alternatives and cacti.A series card for all 10 classes is $25, and offers a ...

  • The giving tree: How to keep Norfolk Pines and other gift plants alive after the holidaysWaterloo-Cedar Falls Courier7 days ago

    Many Norfolk pines are given as gifts during the holiday seasonor brought home to be decorated as mini Christmas trees. A readerasked, "When all the hoopla is over, how do I keep this thingalive?" Good question.

Comments

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Princessa profile image

Princessa  says:
10 months ago

Those cacti are awesome. It is funny we never think about deserts when we think about spring. Yet, deserts can also be very beautiful and colourful!

C.S.Alexis profile image

C.S.Alexis  says:
10 months ago

This took me back to Texas! I was thinking last night about the beautiful early wild flowers there. I so enjoyed this hub and am happy to have some time to explore what everyone is writing about. This is a great hub and might inspire some folks to head for the dessert to see how beautiful it is when the cacti are blooming. The flowers are very vivid with color and you have good photos here to show. Thanks for sharing.

G-Ma Johnson profile image

G-Ma Johnson  says:
10 months ago

These are such beautiful plants loved them all and thanks for such an in depth hub...I was once in Mexico in the desert watching the roadrunners....the birds you showed were so cool..I even have a hard time growing a cactus  Loved the one with the big white  blossoms although they all have their own beauty...G-Ma :O) Hugs & Peace

laringo profile image

laringo  says:
10 months ago

Cacti are not the most beautiful plants but they do yield the most beautiful flowers. A different take on Spring but a very good pick.

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