Old Man of The Andes – Oreocereus Trollii

199.00

Oreocereus trollii a.k.a. the Old Man of the Andes is a s shrubby columnar cactus with fine, completely enveloping hair and powerful coloured spination, but much dwarfer in stature than Oreocereus celsianus. Young plants of Oreocereus trollii are also very popular in small cacti collections.

15 in stock

wws Maya / Pre-sale Questions Need Help? Contact Us via WhatsApp

DISCLAIMER Please Bear in Mind That Plant Image May Slightly Different From Actual Plant in Terms of Color Due to the Lighting During Photo Shooting or the Monitor's Display

Origin and Habitat: South Bolivia (Chuquisaca, Tarija, Potosí ), North Argentina (Jujuy, Salta )
Altitude: 2900-4300 metres above sea level.
Habitat: It grows in very arid mountainous area where its thick hair protects it against light night frosts and from the intense sunlight found at the altitude in which it resides.
Habit: It branches at the base and forms clumps of short chunky columnar shoots that can lay sideways with time. In young plants the shoots are like thick spheres and difficult to recognise as belonging to an Oreocereus.
Stems: 6-10 cm in diameter, at first almost globular, then up to1 m tall (usually less than 50 cm), light-green with a dense, cocoon-like covering of wool (actually radial spines that have evolved to resemble “hairs”), which entirely covers the stem and from which spines emerge.
Ribs: 15-25, low, strongly tuberculate.
Radial spines: Oreocereus trollii has 10 to 15 very fine creamy-white or greyish modified spines up to 7 cm long that look like hair or wool.
Central spines: 3-5, stout awllike-like up to 5 cm yellow, orange, orange-red or brown, dark tipped, protruding through the fine, woolly, hair-like radial spines..
Flowers: Up to 4 cm long pink to violet red and semi-tubular in shape.
Blooming season: Summer.

WeCreativez WhatsApp Support
Our customer support team is here to answer your questions. Ask us anything!
👋 Hi, how can I help?