Where to Find Purple Prickly Pear Cactus for Sale

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Robby

The purple prickly pear cactus (Opuntia santa rita) is a gorgeous and unique variety of prickly pear cactus. With its vibrant purple pads and bright yellow flowers, it’s easy to see why these cacti are becoming increasingly popular. If you’re looking to add some striking color to your garden or indoor plant collection, the purple prickly pear is a fantastic choice. But where can you find purple prickly pear cactus for sale?

A Bit About the Purple Prickly Pear Cactus

Before we dive into where to buy these delightful plants, let’s go over some key facts about the purple prickly pear cactus:

  • Native to the Sonoran Desert in Arizona and Northern Mexico
  • Grows in a sprawling, multi-padded clump reaching 3-6 ft tall and 3-8 ft wide
  • Features rich, eggplant-purple pads that can reach 8 inches long
  • Pads are covered in tiny, hair-like glochids and sharp, straw-colored spines up to 2 inches long
  • Produces showy yellow flowers in mid-spring
  • Extremely drought tolerant once established
  • Can survive brief temperatures as low as 10°F

Check With Local Nurseries That Specialize in Cacti and Succulents

One of the best places to find purple prickly pear cactus is at a local nursery, especially one that specializes in desert plants like cacti and succulents.

Many independent nurseries will carry a selection of prickly pear cactus varieties including the coveted purple prickly pear. The nice thing about buying from a local nursery is that you can see the plants in person before purchasing. This allows you to pick out a healthy, vibrant purple prickly pear for your garden.

Some top nurseries to check for purple prickly pear cactus include

  • Mountain Crest Gardens (California)
  • Arizona Cactus Sales (Arizona)
  • Altman Plants (California)
  • High Country Gardens (New Mexico)
  • Plants for the Southwest (New Mexico)

When you visit, let the staff know you’re looking for the purple Santa Rita prickly pear or Opuntia santa rita. And inspect the cacti carefully to choose ones with rich purple pads and no signs of damage or disease.

Purchase Online From Reputable Sellers

Can’t find purple prickly pear locally? No worries! You can also purchase these sensational cacti from online retailers that ship live plants.

Some well-known online sellers to check for purple prickly pear cactus include:

  • Mountain Crest Gardens
  • Arizona Cactus Sales
  • Succulent Gardens
  • Leaf & Clay
  • Rare Succulents
  • Etsy (from top rated sellers)

The benefit of buying online is access to more plant varieties and sellers. Just be sure to shop with reputable retailers that guarantee live delivery and have excellent reviews.

When your purple prickly pear arrives, carefully unpack it right away and inspect for any damage before planting. Follow proper planting techniques for the best results.

Ask Local Cactus Enthusiasts For Cuttings

Another option for obtaining purple prickly pear cactus is to ask fellow cactus enthusiasts for cuttings from their plants.

Reach out to members of local cactus and succulent societies, or post in gardening groups online, mentioning you’re looking for purple prickly pear cuttings. Oftentimes, seasoned cactus aficionados will be happy to share cuttings from their personal collections.

Once you have a cutting, allow the cut end to dry and callous over for a few days. Then simply stick the cutting in well-draining soil. With proper care, it should root and grow into a new purple prickly pear plant for your garden.

Getting a start from cuttings is often cheaper than buying a nursery plant. Just be sure to verify the exact variety, so you end up with the brilliant purple Opuntia santa rita.

Start Purple Prickly Pear from Seeds

Lastly, you can try growing purple prickly pear cactus from seed. This is the most affordable option but will take the longest to produce mature plants with purple pads.

Search online or ask local nurseries for Opuntia santa rita seeds. Sow the tiny seeds in sandy, well-draining soil. Provide warm temperatures (65-80°F) for the best germination rates.

Once seedlings emerge, care for them under bright light and controlled temperatures. It can take 3-5 years for prickly pear seedlings to mature and develop purple pads. So patience is key when growing from seed.

Add Vibrant Color With the Purple Prickly Pear Cactus

With its stunning purple pads and cheery yellow blooms, the purple prickly pear cactus is sure to be an eye-catching addition to any garden or plant collection. Although not always easy to find, you can obtain this fantastic cactus from local nurseries, online sellers, cuttings, or seeds.

Just be sure to provide this drought-tolerant cactus with full sun, well-draining soil, and occasional deep waterings. Once established, the purple prickly pear will reward you with years of vibrant color and classic desert appeal. So get growing and enjoy the beauty of the Opuntia santa rita!

purple prickly pear cactus for sale

Soil for your Purple Prickly Pear

Opuntia are some of the most resilient cacti on the planet, and will probably survive no matter what you pot them in. I’ve left some cuttings sitting on a brick wall for months at a time, and they still made new pads and even bloomed!

That said, if you want yours to thrive and not merely carry on despite the suffering, you’ll need a nice soil mix that drains well and doesn’t turn into a dried soil-cake.

Compared to other cacti, these are much more forgiving of simply using straight cactus and succulent soil – but I do still like to mix in 25 – 50% pumice if I’m keeping them potted. In pots, the pumice adds extra drainage that encourages healthy root growth and prevents the soil from the two extremes: getting so dry it turns into a brick, or being so wet it turns into a swamp at the bottom.

If you’re planting your Opuntia in the ground, you’ll want to look for a spot that’s very well draining or simply bakes and dries out within a day or two.

My Opuntia that are in-ground are all in dense, sandy, clay-ish soil that’s extremely hard to saturate, dries fast, and I have to dig a large area around any plant I add to the ground to ensure there’s adequate drainage as it gets established. My soil is garbage, but it’s hot garbage, and they love it.

I will point out that I do dig a very large hole for any plant going into the ground: usually half again as deep as the pot the cactus came out of, and twice as wide as the cactus’ original pot. I’ll pour in the excess soil from the pot, and usually I break up the root ball over the hole as well. If it’s particularly packed soil, I might even add some mulch in the hole and then around the cactus to help with moisture retention, decomposition, and overall soil health.

The big thing is that there’s room for drainage, room for the roots to expand into, and I plan for how crummy my dirt is.

If you have particularly rich soil that works well for growing vegetables and a leafy garden (you lucky SOB), that’s probably going to be too rich for an Opuntia. Consider a raised planter where you plant it in 50/50 pumice and soil, or 50% soil, 25% pumice, 25% mulch or orchid bark (if you can get that in bulk in your area). Remember that these are cacti evolved to thrive in harsh, dry, rocky soils, and if it’s too wet for too long, they’ll simply rot.

Or, if they don’t rot, they’ll be too happy and you won’t get that purple color they’re so well known for.

These need far less water than you think, but as the years go on with your plant in the same pot, the need goes up much faster than you expect.

What do I mean by that?

The Opuntia macrocentra at right did great with the same watering schedule as the rest of my greenhouse for about 3 years – but this year, 2024, it is big time on the struggle bus. The central stems are getting bark, the new pads aren’t as strongly spined, and any new pads that come in are very thin and the overall look of the plant is decidedly “crispy”.

It’s been 4 years since I potted it up, and it’s very obvious that the plant needs a soil refresh.

If I don’t intend to repot it, I need to water it more often (and fertilize) to get it to produce the type of beautiful, showy growth seen in the photo at right.

Opuntia macrocentra in July 2021

So for potted plants – the longer your cactus has been in the same pot, the more water it will need in hot summer months. Saturate the soil, and use a chopstick or just stick from outside to poke the dirt and check that it’s genuinely getting saturated all the way through. For mine in this pot, the first couple years it was easy to saturate fully and see water draining out the bottom.

In the last two years, though, the soil has noticeably pulled back from the edges and has sunken in, both signs of “soil compaction” and that the soil has lost volume. This is also an indication of poorer soil quality, and to get blooms or new pad growth, fertilizer is a must.

The photo above is my macrocentra as of June of 2024, showing new paddle growth (and the low quantity of large spines that results from being under 40% shade cloth!).

I have this in the “watering” section, rather than the sun or soil section, because in order to get new growth and maintain this cactus in old soil I’ve had to baby it considerably.

SO:

Freshly potted? Are you using pure cactus soil with no amendments? Water it less than you think: once a week at most in peak summer months, more like once a month if you’re in a particularly humid climate or the cactus is indoors.

Has it been in the same pot for years? When you water it and then use a stick to poke an inch or two down, is the soil down there dry, or does it immediately sponge up the water? If dry, water it more often – that’s when every week will probably be appreciated. If it’s still turning into equally moist soil after 3 or 4 years, tell me what potting soil you’re using, because that’s miraculous.

With amended soil that has more pumice or bark to encourage drainage, you can lean into more frequent watering in summer months. Unless you’re living in the high deserts of Arizona, Nevada, or New Mexico, that means once a week at most. If you get regular summer thunderstorms, you may be able to skip watering your opuntia entirely if you keep it outdoors.

Those who can plant them in-ground can play this much more by ear. The only time to really make sure you’re watering consistently is in spring, when the new paddles are produced. This keeps the new growth consistent and attractive, and minimizes the sort of scarring and reticulated pattern that pops up when they get less water than they need as they plump up new paddles.

In winter, keep your potted Opuntia pretty dry, but the moment the risk of frost has past – start watering again.

Opuntia macrocentra, April 2021, chickens for scale

Note the new paddles coming in!

Right around when you should start watering your Opuntia in late winter is when they also benefit from the first hit of fertilizer.

You see, Opuntia only produce new paddles and flowers one time a year: in spring. For where they grow in the American Southwest, our most intense rainy season is usually late winter through spring, so they bank on that to produce their new growth each year. They still store up energy and are actively growing the rest of the year, but if you want blooms – feed them right before they start making new growth!

A basic balanced fertilizer at half strength is all you need. My beloved blue powder fertilizer works wonders and is extremely easy to use, so I highly recommend it.

Stop feeding them around the time the newest paddles have fully grown in and hardened off. If you fertilize a couple times more beyond that, they won’t mind, but they don’t really need it.

One of my long-suffering Opuntia santa-rita planted by the edge of our driveway, getting roasted by the sun and baking hot – and loving it.

Opuntia basilaris hybrid – “Baby Rita”

This is a hybrid from Waterwise Botanicals, a San Diego nursery less than an hour north of me!

Not a true species, but easy to identify: it’ll be the same deep purple as the Opuntia santa-rita, but the paddles are thick, squat, and significantly smaller. The parent plant of this cross is called a “beavertail opuntia” because the paddles supposedly resemble a beavertail, but these are too thick and pudgy to be confused for such a thing!

I find this hybrid to grow faster and clump more quickly than either of its parents, and it puts on QUITE a show when it blooms.

Where the Opuntia santa-rita will produce brilliant yellow flowers from April to June, the Opuntia “Baby Rita” produces brilliant pink flowers!

This is also very commonly referred to as the “Purple Prickly Pear”, which is just plain confusing given that the Santa Rita is also often called a purple prickly pear.

I won’t say one or the other is the “correct” common name, but I will point out this is precisely why Latin names exist.

Opuntia macrocentra is much less common than the Santa Rita, and they can be nearly impossible to tell apart if the Santa Rita is kept in a particularly bright exposure or stressed state. The macrocentra is often noted as having distinct black spines, which are extra striking against the purple and blue base, but if you look up photos of Santa Ritas in habitat, they can also have spines dark enough to be confusing.

Having grown all three, in my experience, this is the slowest growing of the species. It will still reach 6 feet or so in height (if planted in-ground), but takes quite a while to get there. It’s also more cold-hardy than its cousins.

When in doubt if you have a macrocentra or a santa-rita, the flowers will be your dead giveaway: Opuntia macrocentra has yellow flowers but with a brilliant red center that’s impossible to miss.

Just to be extra clear and obvious, let’s look at them all side by side (assuming you’re on a computer, not your phone). At worst, on a small screen, these will all show in one column.

While macrocentra has those huge, incredible spines, in a more shaded exposure they won’t grow as prominently, while santa-rita will absolutely start making ginormous spines in brighter light. The best and most concrete confirmation of species will be flowers.

Even with small s or at a distance, the flower colors should be distinct enough to tell the difference!

Prickly Pear Cactus experiment trying to propagate and it’s working! Love a garden experiment

FAQ

Are there purple prickly pear cacti?

Opuntia macrocentra, the long-spined purplish prickly pear or purple pricklypear, is a cactus found in the lower Southwestern United States and Northwestern

Is it legal to sell prickly pear?

Prickly pear cacti have sharp spines or barbs that: injure people, pets, working dogs and livestock ▪ injure, cause infections in and kill native animals ▪ blind animals ▪ prevent farm animals from grazing ▪ restrict animals access to shade and water. It’s a crime to sell or swap prickly pear cacti.

How fast do purple prickly pear cacti grow?

The growth of prickly pear cacti is a testament to their resilience, as they are capable of expanding 1 to 2 feet (30 to 60 cm) each year depending on the …Jun 23, 2024

How to grow purple prickly pear?

Plant this cactus in full sun in any well-drained soil. Purple Prickly Pear is susceptible to cochineal scale, which appears as a white, cottony tuft. Spaying the scale off with water can control it. Water young plants twice a month in summer, once a month or less in the winter.

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