– Heather Houk

Whether you call it a Thanksgiving, Christmas or Easter cactus, it is botanically known as a Schlumbergera.

Schlumbergera russelliana is one of the main parent species of the Christmas cactus hybrids. There are more than a half dozen hybrids showing different leaf shape, color and size. The major “holiday cactus” varieties are:

Truncata: Thanksgiving cactus has distinctly pointed leaf edges and typically blooms from late fall.

Buckleyi: Christmas cactus has less pointed leaf segments and larger flowers, typically blooming from early to midwinter.

Gaertneri: Easter cactus blooms from late winter into spring, with more numerous star-shaped flowers and distinctly rounder leaves.

Schlumbergera naturally occur only in the tropical coastal rain forests of southeastern Brazil, where they naturally grow as epiphytes or lithophytes, thriving on tree branches and rocky ledges. Neither location provides continuously damp soil. They are adapted to dappled light from a dense jungle canopy.

You should be forming an idea of how out of place these “cacti” are in a store, let alone a house in a Southwest desert, growing in commercial potting soil. Is it any wonder that they rarely bloom and quickly look poorly or die?

Here are some best practice tips to help your cactus thrive:

OK, that’s it. You are trying to keep a tropical plant happy in the desert, so Schlumbergera will require a lot of care, but the reward can be spectacular in a few years.

Clint Kerns, a master gardener for the La Plata County Extension Office, filled in for Horticulture and Agriculture specialist Heather Houk this month.