Peyote Cactus Care & Identification Guide
Lophophora williamsii, commonly known as Peyote, is a famous spineless, slow-growing desert cactus native to southwestern Texas and northern Mexico. It grows as a soft, fleshy, blue-green button-like globular stem with a massive, taproot below the surface. In its natural dry habitat, it is extremely adapted to survive prolonged severe drought, but is highly sensitive to root decay.
How to Identify Peyote Cactus
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Distinctive Features: Plump vertical rosettes of fleshy leaves.
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Typical Coloration: Pastel green, blue-gray, turning pink or red under sun stress.
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Potential Confusions: Confused with other similar looking rosettes, but distinguished by leaf thickness.
11-Step Professional Care Guide
Peyote requires a strictly sparse watering routine. Only water in spring and autumn when the soil is 100% dry. Stop watering entirely in summer (heat dormancy) and winter (resting phase). Watering during summer or winter dormancy will rot its massive fleshy taproot, liquefying the button-like stem.
乌羽玉 thrives in Full Sun to Bright Direct Light. Provide bright, consistent indirect filtered sunlight or a few hours of direct morning sun daily. If kept in low-light indoor corners, it will rapidly stretch out (etiolate), losing its tight compact rosette form and turning dull green.
The optimal substrate is a highly alkaline, exceptionally fast-draining gritty mix with very minimal organic content. A perfect recipe consists of 85% mineral grit (pumice, limestone gravel, coarse sand, perlite) and 15% sandy loam (pH 7.0-8.5). Limestone gravel is highly beneficial to mimic its native alkaline habitat.
Thrives in standard warm environmental conditions: 18°C - 30°C. It is highly sensitive to sudden cold drops, frost, and freezing temperatures. Ensure it is kept in rooms that stay above 10°C (50°F) during autumn and winter, as cold drafts will cause the fleshy leaves to turn soft, wrinkled, and watery.
乌羽玉 requires extremely minimal grooming. Use sterilized tweezers or sharp bypass shears to gently clear away dried, naturally shriveled lower leaves at the stem base. This prevents pest harborage and keeps the rosette neat. If the stem becomes leggy, behead and propagate the top rosette.
Feed 乌羽玉 very lightly. Apply a balanced cactus and succulent liquid organic fertilizer diluted to quarter strength once in late spring and once in mid-summer during active vegetative growth. Avoid nitrogen-heavy formulas, which cause bloated, weak growth. Do not fertilize in winter.
Propagate 乌羽玉 easily using stem cuttings, leaf cuttings, or clumping offsets. Carefully wiggle off a healthy leaf or snip a stem rosette in spring. Let the cut callus dry for 2 to 3 days in shade, dip in rooting hormone, and plant upright in dry sandy succulent mix. Water sparingly after roots emerge in 3 weeks.
Choose an unglazed clay or terracotta container with multiple large bottom drainage holes. Terracotta allows excess soil moisture to breathe and evaporate safely, preventing root rot. Repot every 2 years in spring using a container that is only 1 inch wider than the current root system.
Inspect 乌羽玉 regularly for mealybugs hiding in tight rosettes, spider mites spinning fine webs, or flat scale insects. Treat infestations immediately by wiping both sides of leaves with a cotton swab dipped in rubbing alcohol or spraying with organic neem oil solution every 7 days for 3 weeks.
The absolute deadliest disease is root and stem rot caused by overwatering and heavy soil. Prevent this entirely by allowing soil to dry completely. Fungal leaf spots or powdery mildew can also occur in high humidity. Prune affected parts, improve air ventilation, keep leaves dry, and spray with organic copper fungicide.
The secret to a gorgeous 乌羽玉 is bright light and strict neglect. Always place it in a bright south or east-facing window and let it dry completely. Wiping the waxy powder (farina) off Echeverias and Sedums can damage their natural sun protection, so avoid touching the fleshy leaves.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: How do I care for Peyote Cactus?
A: Peyote Cactus requires sandy soil and very sparse watering to thrive.
Q: How often should I water Peyote Cactus?
A: Water deeply only when the potting soil is 100% dry throughout the container.
Q: What is the ideal soil for Peyote Cactus?
A: Use a grit-rich, porous cactus and succulent potting mix containing perlite and pumice.
Q: Can Peyote Cactus survive freezing winter?
A: No. They are highly frost-sensitive. Bring them indoors if temperature drops below 10°C.