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Dragon Fruit ‘Sin Espinas’

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Epiphyllum are epiphytic cacti as their name suggests. Some call them orchid cactus due to their large bright blooms and growth habit. Epiphytic plants grow on other plants, not in a parasitic fashion but as hosts. They are not cold hardy and generally can be found only as houseplants or greenhouse specimens.

Read more at Gardening Know How: Epiphyllum Plant Care: Tips For Growing Epiphyllum Cactus https://www.gardeningknowhow.com/ornamental/cacti-succulents/epiphyllum/epiphyllum-plant-care.htm

Epiphyllum are epiphytic cacti as their name suggests. Some call them orchid cactus due to their large bright blooms and growth habit. Epiphytic plants grow on other plants, not in a parasitic fashion but as hosts. They are not cold hardy and generally can be found only as houseplants or greenhouse specimens.

Read more at Gardening Know How: Epiphyllum Plant Care: Tips For Growing Epiphyllum Cactus https://www.gardeningknowhow.com/ornamental/cacti-succulents/epiphyllum/epiphyllum-plant-care.htm
Epiphyllum are epiphytic cacti as their name suggests. Some call them orchid cactus due to their large bright blooms and growth habit. Epiphytic plants grow on other plants, not in a parasitic fashion but as hosts. They are not cold hardy and generally can be found only as houseplants or greenhouse specimens.

Read more at Gardening Know How: Epiphyllum Plant Care: Tips For Growing Epiphyllum Cactus https://www.gardeningknowhow.com/ornamental/cacti-succulents/epiphyllum/epiphyllum-plant-care.htm

Dragon Fruit - Sin Espinas

Sin Espinas Dragon Fruit variety comes from the genus Hylocereus and an unknown species native to Nicaragua. It is one of five known varieties to be grown commercially there but the only plant of the five that are considered thornless, yes THORNLESS! Flowers are large that resemble typical Hylocereus flowers. The fruits average size is a pound with thick pink skin with green fins. All aspects of this variety would appear that the fruit would have purple flesh, but to our surprise, it’s a firm, deep red flesh. The fruit is good quality with an average Brix score of 17. Like most red flesh varieties, the fruit is also very high in antioxidants. Flower bud to night-blooming flower is a typical 30 days then another 30 days to harvest in South Louisiana. The most interesting aspect of this variety is its lack of spines. Yes, we repeated it, it’s thornless. The stems are thin and very light with 1 to 2 tiny spines near the areole considering this variety to be spinless.

This variety is not self pollinating.

Our experience with Sin Espinas has been promising. The first fruit at Spicy Exotics gave a rating of a 16 Brix. We harvested a little early, and I’m sure if it was left on the vine a little longer, the brix would increase. The flesh was very firm and tart. It tasted just like cherries, and we loved it!