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Mar 20, 2018 11:12 PM CST
Thread OP
Name: Stefan
SE europe(balkans) (Zone 6b)
Wild Plant Hunter Plumerias Overwinters Tender Plants Indoors Cactus and Succulents Sempervivums Bromeliad
Adeniums Bookworm Sedums Tropicals Fruit Growers Foliage Fan
My guess its some kind of huernia, but im not even 1% certain due to huernia's rarity, nor have I found another stapeliad on the web looking like it. Im noob in both euphorbia and apocyanae departments. Please help me find and ID.
Thumb of 2018-03-21/skopjecollection/626a76
Thumb of 2018-03-21/skopjecollection/5346c3
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Mar 21, 2018 11:25 AM CST
Name: Daisy I
Reno, Nv (Zone 6b)
Not all who wander are lost
Garden Sages Plant Identifier
I think you will have to get back to us when it has a flower. Why are Huernias rare?
Life is not a journey to the grave with the intention of arriving safely in a pretty and well preserved body, but rather to skid in broadside, thoroughly used up, totally worn out, and proclaiming...."WOW What a Ride!!" -Mark Frost

President: Orchid Society of Northern Nevada
Webmaster: osnnv.org
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Mar 21, 2018 12:26 PM CST
Thread OP
Name: Stefan
SE europe(balkans) (Zone 6b)
Wild Plant Hunter Plumerias Overwinters Tender Plants Indoors Cactus and Succulents Sempervivums Bromeliad
Adeniums Bookworm Sedums Tropicals Fruit Growers Foliage Fan
Only indicator of "rare" was the so called succulentguide..... but it has been wrong before.....
Ive no idea for the encounter-ability of some plants.....
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