@RealLeeBruns Opuntia polyacantha, O. macrorhiza, O. humifusa, O. fragilis, Escobaria missouriensis, E. vivipara, and Echinocereus viridiflorus.
@PrairieCzar Escobaria missouriensis, Coryphantha vivipara, and Echinocereus reichenbachii are all native to KS and can be grown quite easily in a rock garden where the upper several inches are a mixture of gravel and sand. I'm growing them all in WI. E. missouriensis is especially easy.
The absolute largest Escobaria missouriensis I have ever seen! Growing on a steep slope along the banks of Lake Oahe in South Dakota. #iamabotanist https://t.co/VAvydHknBc
@dryspikesedge Thanks! Interesting to see the Escobaria missouriensis occurs in a few Corn Belt counties.
@an_earthiest Escobaria missouriensis (the orange cactus, native to the western tallgrass westward), Echinocereus viridiflorus (native from the Black Hills to parts of NM and TX), and Pediomelum esculentum (our native prairie turnip). The grass is a mix of Bouteloua gracilis and B. hirsuta.
@sunnylovesskz Ohhh, a Escobaria Missouriensis???
Por aquí también pudimos ver Linum lewissii, Escobaria missouriensis a punto de florecer o este Penstemon (plantagináceas) un género muy diversificado en todo el continente https://t.co/USHzc9DuxE
Hey, so I have a lot of these seeds, and having already germinated a couple I don't really need any more. They're very fresh and are bound to germinate, so if you'd like seeds for Escobaria missouriensis, DM me! https://t.co/o4zVJi2l0r
Escobaria missouriensis? Or a variety? #TestYourselfTuesday @ColoradoNPS https://t.co/pDyaVh4hpM
Photo: Escobaria missouriensis is the most cold hardy of all species in the genus and featured... http://t.co/QNjg6hudp0
Escobaria missouriensis. https://t.co/SxEqjpMY5g
6/3/18 Missouri Foxtail Cactus Escobaria missouriensis North Dakota Parks and Recreation Department, Stumpf Natural Area, Huff North Dakota.
#Flowers #Escobaria missouriensis ssp.asperispina succulent cactus https://t.co/8kYw6ufjSv