Houseplants · Guide

Rhipsalis pilocarpa

Rhipsalis pilocarpa (Hairy-stemmed Wickerware Cactus) Care Guide

Updated by Funfactorium Editorial1 min readFor fun · sources cited
Photo: Gerbil · CC BY-SA 3.0
In short

Rhipsalis pilocarpa, sold as Hairy-stemmed Wickerware Cactus, is an epiphytic cactus native to humid tropical forests, unlike the desert cacti most growers picture when they hear 'cactus'. A Brazilian epiphytic cactus with cylindrical green stems covered in fine bristly hairs, distinguishing it from most smooth-stemmed Rhipsalis. Produces small white fragrant flowers followed by hairy red fruits. Jungle cacti tolerate higher humidity, lower light, and more frequent watering than their desert relatives, which is why they suit indoor cultivation.

Care facts at a glance

Light
Bright indirect
Water
Water when the top 2 to 3 cm of mix has dried; jungle cacti like more water than desert cacti.
Humidity
50–80 %
Temperature
15–27 °C
Soil
Free-draining epiphyte mix of orchid bark, perlite, and a small fraction of peat or coir.
Origin
Tropical and subtropical forests of Central and South America (Schlumbergera, Epiphyllum, Rhipsalis), with Rhipsalis baccifera the only cactus native outside the Americas.
Mature size
30 to 100 cm spread depending on species; most are pendulous when grown in hanging pots.

Overview

Rhipsalis pilocarpa is a Cactaceae epiphyte that grows on tree trunks and branches in humid tropical forests. A Brazilian epiphytic cactus with cylindrical green stems covered in fine bristly hairs, distinguishing it from most smooth-stemmed Rhipsalis. Produces small white fragrant flowers followed by hairy red fruits. The flat or cylindrical jointed stems do the work of leaves — true leaves are absent or reduced to scales — and the plants drape rather than grow upright the way desert cacti do.

Care Priorities

  • Bright filtered light, never direct midday sun.
  • Free-draining epiphytic mix with orchid bark.
  • Water more freely than desert cacti, but let the top dry between waterings.
  • A cool dry winter rest triggers flowering.

Common Problems

Yellowing or red-flushed segments are usually too much direct sun. Soft mushy stems are overwatering. Flower-bud drop on Schlumbergera is almost always temperature swings during the bud-set period.

Sources & further reading (2)
  1. encyclopedia — accessed 2026-04-29
  2. botanical-garden — accessed 2026-04-29

Frequently asked questions

Why are the stems fuzzy?

R. pilocarpa stems carry fine bristly hairs (technically reduced spines) along the length of each segment. The trait is unusual within Rhipsalis and gives the species its name (*pilocarpa* meaning 'hairy fruit'). The hairs are soft and harmless to handle.

How is a jungle cactus different from a desert cactus?

Jungle cacti grow as epiphytes on tree branches in humid tropical forests, so they tolerate lower light, higher humidity, and more frequent watering than desert cacti. Most are pendulous and grown in hanging pots.

Can I propagate from a stem segment?

Yes — break off a healthy two- or three-segment piece, let the cut callus for a few days, and push the cut end into moist epiphytic mix. Roots typically appear within two to three weeks.

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