Authentic beaded jewelry, handmade by Huichol artisans in Mexico in the 1980's. Each piece is a vibrant link to the rich culture and connection to nature that embodies the Huichol way of life. The intricate bead work depicts many symbols common to the Huichols, such as deer, peyote, flowers, birds, scorpions, snakes and ceremonial arrows.
The Huichol—who call themselves the Wixárika—are an indigenous people of western Mexico whose culture and traditions remain among the most intact in Mesoamerica. They live primarily in remote mountain regions of the Sierra Madre Occidental, in the states of Jalisco, Nayarit, Durango, and Zacatecas.
Huichol beadwork is far more than decoration. Artists use tiny glass beads in two traditional ways: pressed into beeswax to create intricate mosaics, and carefully strung and woven to form belts, necklaces, purses, and other wearable or functional objects. The vivid designs depict sacred symbols drawn from their spiritual world—deer, maize, peyote, the sun, and ancestral stories. Each piece is both a work of art and a visual prayer, reflecting a deep connection to nature, ritual, and cultural memory passed down through generations.
A choice miniature from Mexico that grows in a full compact rosette to about 6 inches. The stiff leaves are very thick and succulent terminating in a sharp spine. With age the plant develops white filaments along the leaf margins, which grow fairly long and curl. This form has bold creamy white variegation along the margins. Cold hardy for gardens to freezing and just below. Small enough and slow enough for pot culture.
This is a good quality, versatile formula for epiphytic plants. This fertilizer does not use urea as a nitrogen source, as it is not usable by epiphytic plants. Water soluble, it can be used in daily irrigation or applied at intervals. Will not burn foliage at recommended rates and does not stain foliage. This is the fertilizer we use here at Tropiflora for our bromeliads, orchids and all epiphytic plants.
Application Rates: Constant Feed: A rate of 50 to 150 ppm of nitrogen is recommended. For bi-weekly applications: Use at the rate of 1½ to 2 tsp per gallon of water. Monthly: 1 to 1½ to tbs/gal.
THIS PLANT IS ON C.I.T.E.S. AND CANNOT BE EXPORTED
For lovers of weird, a nearly leafless, shrub-like member of the Didiereaceae that can reach nearly 10 feet tall but grows in a rather haphazard clump of tangled branches. The cylindrical stems are kind of olive green with silver tricomes and bears scattered conical spines which are stout but not ‘dangerous’.
Native to southern coastal Madagascar in the regions of the thorn forest from near sea level to almost 1,000 feet. A dioecious species that requires both sexes to set seed, but is easily propagated from cuttings. Reportedly slow growing but we do not find this to be especially true. Best grown in full sun to partial shade, well drained soils and moderate watering. Protect from freezing.
A native to Southern Madagascar. Alluaudia humbertii is a deciduous, succulent, small tree or large shrub native to semi-arid scrubland and thorn forests. Mature plants can reach 16-20 feet tall and equally as wide with a stout trunk and freely branched habit. The slender branches have thin, grey bark, range in form from procumbent to arched to upright, and are covered in spines reaching 0.75" long. Small, rounded, succulent leaves reaching 0.75" in diameter emerge from the branches during the rainy season and are dropped by the plant during the dry season.
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