Page Twelve 
LEPTOCEREUS Jeonii. A rare Cuban species grow- 
ing tall and much branched with golden spines. Speci- 
mens $1.00 
LEUCHTENBERGIA pyrincipis. Called “Agave 
Cactus’’ because its long slender tubercles tipped with 
straw like spine forfnations cause it to resemble an 
Agave or Century Plant rather than a cactus. Flowers 
very large and yellow. Nice seedling plants .75 
LOBIVIA. A genus of rather small growing plants 
single headed or forming clusters of many heads 
prized for the colorful day blooming flowers ranging 
from yellow through orange and reds, often with two 
tone color arrangements. Need loose well drained 
soil, water well when growing, but keep dormant and 
rather dry during the winter months for best flowers. 
Because seed is difficult to obtain most of these are 
offered as grafted specimens. They like full sun and 
prefer out door locations, 
L. allegriana. Bright green body, scarlet flower .35 
L. atrovirens. A neat short spined species offsetting 
freely. Grafted .60 
L. aurea. Easily grown, flower large golden yellow. 
Small .35, larger .50, specimen clusters $1.25 
L. backebergii. Light pea green body, nearly spine- 
less; flower bright carmine .35 
L. binghamiana. Small clustering, free flowering with 
bright red flowers .25 
L. boliviensis. Long spined, red flower .40 
L. caespitosa. Long yellow spines, flower yellow and 
red 335 “3 : 
L. chrysantha. Chocolate gray body; golden flowers 
shading to a coffee color on the outer petals. Grafted 
50 
L. corbula. Orange red flower, a rare new discovery. 
Grafts .60 
L. cylindrica. Densely. gray spined with yellow flowers 
50, grafted .75 i 
L. drijveriana. Pectinate gray spines, yellow flower. 
Grafts .50 
L. drijveriana vat. aurantiaca, Grafted .50 
L. ducis pauli. Weavy hooked spines. Large grafted 
plants $1.00 
R. W. KELLY 

L. euanthema. Fine white bristly spines. Grafted or 
rooted .35 
L. famatimensis. The most beautiful with its chocolate 
brown body overlaid with rows of lighter colored 
spines lying flat against the ribs making it easy to 
handle. The flowers are a dark blood red. I have seen 
them two inches in diameter on a one inch plant 
Grafted .50, larger with offsets $1.00, rooted plants .50 
L. famatimensis vat. setosa. Has short white bristly 
spines and a yellow flower. Rooted or grafted .50, 
large specimens $1.00 
L. ferox. Stiff heavy spined. Grafted .60 
L. formosa (Syn Acanthocalycium formosum) .40 
L. grandiflora. This name is uncertain, but it is a beau- 
tiful long yellow spined plant. Grafts .50 
L. haageana. Flower yellow, stigma green. Grafted .40 
L. haageana var. chrysantha. Golden flower. Grafted 
40 
L. hertrichiana. Fast growing freely offsetting, with 
bright green body. Produces flowers more profusely 
than any other Lobivia that we have grown. Large red 
flower .60 
L. hossei, Rare slow growing species. Grafts $1.00 
L. huascha. A tall growing species with red flower 
formerly classified as a Trichocereus $1.00 
L. jajoiana. Distinctive with whitish radial spines and 
black central; flowers red with black throat. Grafted 
.40, rooted .60 
L. jajoiana vat. fleischeriana. Similar to foregoing, but 
with a black hooked central spine. Grafted .50 
L. janseniana,. Grayish green body, spines black, flower 
yellow. Grafted .50 
L. johnstoniana, Grafted plants .40 
L. lateritia. Rooted plant .40 
L. longispina. Grafted .75 
L. mistiensis. A distinctive species from near the Peru- 
vian volcano Misti. Plant body a peculiar shade of 
blue-gray-green slightly glaucous. Flowers in shades 
of red tinged with violet. Grafted .40 
L. nealeana. ‘Tiny species with large bright red flower. 
Graft .40 

Lobivia rubescens 
