Coral Cactus
Taxonomy
Grafted Euphorbia Lactea
Grafted
How to care for Coral Cactus
How often to water your Coral Cactus
every 12
Coral Cactus needs 0.5 cups of water every 12 when it doesn’t get direct sunlight and is potted in a 5" pot.
Use our water calculator to personalize watering recommendations to your environment or download Greg for more advanced recommendations for all of your plants.
Water 0.5 cups every
12
Finding light for Coral Cactus in your home
a window
Coral Cactus may have difficulty thriving, and will drop leaves 🍃, without ample sunlight.
Place it less than 3 feet from a south-facing window to maximize the potential for growth.
Select your region to see how the current weather in your area affects the placement of Coral Cactus in your home 🏡.
How to fertilize Coral Cactus
Most potting soils come with ample nutrients which plants use to produce new growth.
By the time your plant has depleted the nutrients in its soil it’s likely grown enough to need a larger pot anyway.
To replenish this plant's nutrients, repot your Coral Cactus after it doubles in size or once a year—whichever comes first.
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Help with fan cactus? I noticed the top is suddenly mushy and the stem is off-color. It was sitting under a grow lights in the same kind of soil it's lived in for 5+ years. What's got it sad? What can I do? #succulentsquad #succulentlove #help
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The weather is turning to the 40’s overnight and high 60’s daytime. When should I bring in my potted Meyer lemon tree and use my growing lights?
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#MeyerLemonTree My Meyer lemon tree looks like this now. Very naked and I have this 1 baby lemon, the others have fallen off after turning very pale. Help please! No bugs to be seen, no root rot, letting moisture dwindle to dry on my meter, has grow light plus some indirect. My leaves that are left are turning brown around the edges. My grow lights are 2ft from him. What can I do?
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#MeyerLemonTree# #PestControl My Meyer lemon tree arrived in March, was in a 1 gallon container, full of blooms ready to open. I transplanted it into a 7 gallon plastic pot with drainage and soil for citrus. It bloomed, produced many little lemons. Here’s where things go bad.. I saw spider mite webs and mites. I sprayed with neem oil and that took care of the problem. Since the spider mite attack, my tree is losing 1-2 green leaves a day ( he’s pretty naked), and my tiny lemons are dropping off also. I recently transplanted into a 17” terracotta pot in hopes to figure out watering schedule. I use a meter which seems to say dry almost every day. I’ve added worm castings and citrus fertilizer. I use grow lights 18” away, and indirect light from patio door facing west.. Help please! I have 3 lemons that I hope don’t fall off.
Care Summary for Coral Cactus
Coral Cactus
Greg recommends:
Water
0.5 cups every 12 days
Placement
< 3ft from a window
Nutrients
Repot after 2x growth
Based on the 4” pot your plant is in, and that it doesn’t get direct sunlight.