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Cacti

Close up of Myrtillocactus geometrizans fukurokuryuzinboku on a white backround

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Cactaceae

Cacti

Quick Overview

Cacti: light-first plants with a true dry-down cycle

  • Light: very bright; direct sun is often ideal after acclimation.
  • Watering: soak fully, then wait until the mix is completely dry before watering again.
  • Substrate: gritty, airy and mostly mineral for fast drainage.
  • Pots: drainage holes are non-negotiable; smaller pots often dry more predictably.
  • Handling: spines and fine glochids can stick, so use tongs or thick gloves.
  • Growth pace: slow and steady; compact growth usually means conditions are right.
Botanical Profile

The defining cactus feature is the areole, a reduced branch that produces spines, flowers and new growth. That is what separates true cacti from other succulent plants that may look similar.

Details & Care

Cacti: bright-window plants with a real dry-down cycle

What Cacti need most indoors

Cacti need more light than most houseplants, and they show weak conditions fast. In a bright window they stay compact, firm and well-shaped. In poor light they stretch, lean and lose the structure that makes them worth growing indoors in the first place at all.

Most cacti here want the brightest place you can offer, fast drainage and a watering routine that includes a genuine dry-down. That combination matters far more than feeding, decorative pots or trying to rescue them with guesswork later.

Not every cactus wants the exact same sun

Many cacti suit south- or west-facing windows and can take direct sun indoors once acclimated. Some softer-bodied or forest-derived types, especially flatter-stemmed species, do better with strong filtered light or gentler direct sun instead of hard midday exposure all day.

If a cactus is moved too suddenly from greenhouse shade or shipping darkness into intense sun, you can get scorch instead of healthy colour. Pale or corky burn marks do not reverse, so gradual adjustment is worth it.

Watering and substrate-soak, drain, then leave them alone

For most cacti, water thoroughly only when the potting mix has dried almost completely or fully through, then let all excess drain away. In cooler or darker months, watering should slow sharply because the mix stays wet longer and roots use less moisture.

Dense, organic compost is where indoor cactus care usually goes wrong. Use a mineral-rich, fast-draining mix with pumice, lava, grit, perlite or similar coarse material so water moves coarse material so water moves through quickly and roots stay aerated.

Temperature, airflow and handling

Warm indoor conditions usually suit cacti well during active growth. If temperatures drop, the mix should stay drier. Cold and wet together are far riskier than warm and dry. Good airflow also helps stems dry properly after watering and reduces fungal problems around the base.

Handling depends on the plant. Long spines are obvious, but fine glochids can be even more irritating. Folded paper, tongs or thick gloves are usually better than bare hands when moving plants around.

What you may notice after shipping

Cacti usually travel better than soft foliage plants, but they can still arrive dusty, slightly wrinkled or marked where spines rubbed against packaging. That is mostly cosmetic if the body still feels firm and the base is sound.

Set new plants in bright light first, then move them into stronger direct sun over several days if needed. Check the mix before watering. A firm cactus rarely needs immediate watering just because it has been in a box. For broader settling-in advice, see our acclimatisation guide.

Cactus troubleshooting-fast signs that matter

  • Pale, narrow new growth: not enough light.
  • Soft base or translucent tissue: excess moisture is the likely cause.
  • Wrinkling with a dry pot: usually thirst, provided roots are still healthy.
  • Bleached tan patches: sunscald after a sudden jump into stronger light.
  • No real growth despite watering: often a light problem, not a fertiliser problem.

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Frequently Asked Questions About Cacti