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night blooming succulent plant

night blooming succulent plant Buy Night-blooming Cereus Phoenix, AZ | C. repandus

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Description

night blooming succulent plant Buy Night-blooming Cereus Phoenix, AZ | C. repandusStunning Night Blooming Columnar Cactus for Phoenix Landscapes Night blooming Cereus (Cereus repandus) is one of the most dramatic columnar cacti you can plant in the Phoenix Valley. Its tall, ribbed blue green columns create bold vertical structure by day, then steal the show on summer nights with enormous white flowers that open after dark and fill the air with sweet fragrance. This tough, fast growing cactus laughs at Phoenix heat and thrives on

Stunning Night-Blooming Columnar Cactus for Phoenix Landscapes

Night-blooming Cereus (Cereus repandus) is one of the most dramatic columnar cacti you can plant in the Phoenix Valley. Its tall, ribbed blue-green columns create bold vertical structure by day, then steal the show on summer nights with enormous white flowers that open after dark and fill the air with sweet fragrance. This tough, fast-growing cactus laughs at Phoenix heat and thrives on almost no supplemental water once established. Whether you're building a desert-modern courtyard in Scottsdale, anchoring a xeriscape bed in Gilbert, or creating a living fence line in Chandler — Night-blooming Cereus delivers towering architectural beauty with minimal effort.

Night-blooming Cereus Plant Details

Attribute Detail
Scientific Name Cereus repandus
Common Names Night-blooming Cereus, Peruvian Apple Cactus, Hedge Cactus
Mature Height 15–30 feet
Mature Width 6–10 feet (multi-branching with age)
Growth Rate Fast — 2–3 feet per year in Phoenix
Sun Full sun (6+ hrs). Handles reflected heat from walls and pavement.
Water Very low once established. Highly drought-tolerant.
USDA Zones 9–11 (Phoenix is Zone 9b–10a)
Soil Well-draining. Adapts to Arizona caliche and rocky desert soils.
Foliage Evergreen — blue-green ribbed columns year-round
Bloom Large white nocturnal flowers in summer, followed by edible red fruit

Night-blooming Cereus Uses in Phoenix Landscapes

Dramatic Vertical Focal Point

Few plants match the commanding vertical presence of a mature Night-blooming Cereus. A single specimen planted in a courtyard, entry garden, or pool-adjacent bed becomes an instant architectural statement. Its candelabra-like branching pattern adds sculptural interest that only improves with age. Pair with low desert groundcovers like Trailing Lantana or Blackfoot Daisy to emphasize the height contrast.

Natural Privacy Screen & Living Fence

Night-blooming Cereus grows tall and dense enough to serve as a living privacy barrier along property lines, pool fences, and side yards across Mesa, Tempe, and Peoria. Plant 4–6 feet apart for a continuous screen. A 20-foot fence line needs roughly 4–5 plants; a 40-foot run needs 8–10. The columnar form takes up very little lateral space, making it ideal for narrow side yards.

Low-Water Xeriscape Gardens

For Phoenix homeowners looking to slash water bills, Night-blooming Cereus is a dream plant. Once established, it survives on rainfall alone in most years with just occasional deep soaks in peak summer. Combine with Desert Spoon, Agave, and Mexican Fence Post for a lush-looking desert garden that uses a fraction of the water of traditional landscaping.

Wildlife & Pollinator Garden

The enormous white flowers attract lesser long-nosed bats, hawk moths, and other nocturnal pollinators — making Night-blooming Cereus a star in wildlife-friendly landscapes in Scottsdale, Cave Creek, and Fountain Hills. The edible red fruit that follows provides food for birds and desert wildlife throughout late summer.

Best Time to Plant Night-blooming Cereus in Phoenix

Fall (October–November) is the ideal planting window. Soil is still warm enough to encourage root growth, while cooler air temperatures reduce transplant stress. Your Night-blooming Cereus gets 6–8 months of root establishment before facing its first Phoenix summer. Spring (February–April) is the second-best window. Avoid planting in the peak summer months when possible, though this hardy cactus can handle it with extra watering attention.

How to Plant Night-blooming Cereus

  1. Dig wide, not deep — excavate a hole 2–3× the root ball width, same depth as the container.
  2. Check for caliche — if you hit a hardpan layer, break through it completely for drainage. Columnar cacti rot in standing water.
  3. Backfill with native soil — do not amend heavily. A light 20% cactus mix blend is fine.
  4. Spacing — 4–6 feet apart for a privacy screen; 8–12 feet for individual specimens.
  5. Water basin — build a 3–4 inch soil ring around the root zone to direct water during establishment.
  6. Mulch — 2–3 inches of rock or gravel mulch (not bark) around the base to retain moisture and keep roots cool.

Watering Night-blooming Cereus in Phoenix

First Year Watering Schedule

  • Weeks 1–2: Every 3–4 days, deep and slow (15–20 min drip).
  • Month 1–3: Every 7–10 days.
  • Month 3–6: Every 10–14 days (weekly in peak summer heat).
  • After Year 1: Every 2–3 weeks in summer; monthly or less in winter. Established Night-blooming Cereus is extremely drought-tolerant.

Drip Irrigation

Place 1–2 emitters 12–18 inches from the trunk, each delivering 1–2 GPH. Run for 30–45 minutes per session. Once established (after 12–18 months), this cactus needs very little supplemental irrigation — just occasional deep soaks during extended dry periods in summer.

How fast does Night-blooming Cereus grow in Phoenix?
Night-blooming Cereus is one of the fastest-growing columnar cacti in the Phoenix Valley, adding 2–3 feet of height per year under good conditions. Larger nursery stock (15–25 gallon) establishes quickly and may grow even faster once the root system fills out. Expect multi-branching to begin once the main column reaches 5–6 feet.

When does Night-blooming Cereus flower?
Night-blooming Cereus produces its spectacular white flowers from late May through August in Phoenix. The flowers open after sunset and close by mid-morning the next day. Each bloom is 4–6 inches across and sweetly fragrant. Established plants can produce dozens of flowers across the summer blooming season.

Is the fruit of Night-blooming Cereus edible?
Yes — the red fruit that follows the flowers is edible and sweet, sometimes called Peruvian Apple. It has white flesh similar to dragonfruit and can be eaten fresh or used in smoothies. Birds and wildlife also love it.

Can Night-blooming Cereus handle Phoenix summer heat?
Absolutely. Night-blooming Cereus thrives in full sun and handles the reflected heat from block walls, concrete driveways, and west-facing exposures. It's one of the toughest columnar cacti for the hottest microclimates in the Valley.

Does Night-blooming Cereus need staking?
Younger plants (under 5 feet) may benefit from a wooden stake for support until the root system is well established, especially in windy areas. Mature plants develop a strong, self-supporting trunk and typically don't need staking.

You May Also Like

  • Mexican Fence Post — Clean, columnar form with vertical white stripes. Excellent companion for a desert column garden.
  • San Pedro Cactus — Fast-growing blue-green columns with a similar growth habit. Another great choice for vertical impact.
  • Totem Pole Cactus — Smooth, spineless columns with a unique knobby texture. Perfect for a modern cactus collection.
  • Spiral Cereus — Twisted corkscrew ribs add sculptural drama. A stunning contrast to the straight columns of Night-blooming Cereus.
  • Arizona Organ Pipe — Native Arizona columnar cactus with multi-branching form. Pairs beautifully in desert-native landscapes.

How Many Night-blooming Cereus Do I Need?

Because it grows tall and narrow, Night-blooming Cereus works equally well as a single focal column or a living privacy screen. For a continuous screen, space plants about 5 feet apart; for stand-alone specimens give each column 8 to 12 feet.

Screen Length Plants Needed (5 ft centers)
10 ft 3
20 ft 4 to 5
40 ft 8 to 10

For a single architectural focal point, plant one column 8 to 12 feet clear of walls and other plants so its candelabra branching has room to develop.

Night-blooming Cereus Season-by-Season in Phoenix

  • Spring (Feb–Apr): Growth resumes fast as soil warms. Second-best planting window. Columns put on height before the bloom season.
  • Summer (May–Sep): The headline season. Huge fragrant white flowers open after dark from late May through August, drawing bats and hawk moths, followed by sweet edible red fruit. Thrives in full sun and reflected heat; monsoon rain covers most of its water needs.
  • Fall (Oct–Nov): Prime planting season. Warm soil and cooler air let roots establish before winter. Late fruit may still ripen.
  • Winter (Dec–Jan): Evergreen and dormant. Frost-tender: columns can show damage below about 32°F, so cover younger plants on hard frost nights and keep them dry through the cold.

At a Glance

✔ Heat-Loving (Reflected-Heat Tolerant)   ✔ Drought-Tolerant   ✔ Pollinator-Friendly   ✔ Evergreen   ✔ Low-Maintenance   ✔ Edible   ✔ Deer & Rabbit-Resistant

Plant It With

  • Mexican Fence Post: clean ribbed columns that build out a coordinated desert column garden.
  • San Pedro Cactus: fast blue-green columns with a similar habit for layered vertical impact.
  • Spiral Cereus: twisted corkscrew ribs that contrast the straight columns for sculptural drama.
  • Arizona Organ Pipe: native multi-branching column that ties the grouping into a desert-native theme.

Is Night-blooming Cereus Right for Your Yard?

Night-blooming Cereus thrives in full sun, reflected heat, and fast-draining soil, and it is ideal where you want fast vertical structure, a narrow living screen, or a fragrant night-blooming focal point with edible fruit. It is not a fit if your soil holds water (the columns rot in standing water), if you cannot cover it during hard winter freezes below freezing, or if you need a spineless plant directly against a walkway.

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KC
Carnegie, US
★★★★★ 3
Super fun concept, but material needs improving.
Size: Small, Style: Ultra Tug
The concept - amazing. The materials used? - not so much. Our senior Chorgi is not even a super chewer,yet he managed to get a tiny piece chewed off of the ball in under 10 minutes. Also, the handle is not flexible enough. It's like a hard, tough, sharp and thick nylon material. You can see how they were trying to make it more durable,but there jas got to be an alternative material. This nylon is sharp on their gums and roof if mouth. For now I am watching our dog carefully with it, because he loves how it bounces funny so its more fun to chase. Fur babies are pur children. You would not leave a 2 ur old alone to play with a toy, would you? I'm just not sure i'd buy another. I bought 3 at once. Returning 2 .
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on June 11, 2026
J
Verified Purchase
Joshua J. Selby
Fort Morgan, US
★★★★★ 5
Great toy!
Size: Medium, Style: Ultra Tug
We have a 1 yr old rescue (German shepherd mix) and she didnt really know how to play with humans, she was scared of everything. We got this toy to help us teach her how to play fetch and tug of war and it really helped her come out of her shell. She loves this toy! It is very durable and fun to throw. Just enough rope to tug with her and doesn't come apart like other rope material. We got medium size and prob buy another one.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on May 8, 2026
G
Verified Purchase
Grant C.
Fort Morgan, US
★★★★★ 5
Durable and fun
Size: Medium, Style: Ultra Tug, Size: Medium, Style: Ultra Tug
This is a cool toy. My dog took to it right away. It tosses great. I like that you can play a little tugging along with fetch. We mainly use it outdoors. It feels very strong and durable. For size reference my dog is a mini golden doodle and weighs about 30lbs.
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Reviewed in the United States on February 22, 2026
C
Verified Purchase
Clever Naming Scheme
Cuba, US
★★★★★ 5
Durable
Size: Small, Style: Ultra Duo Tug
Well, our dogs didn't end up playing tug with each other, but they love the toy anyway and it still looks pretty good after a month. That doesn't sound like much, but they both love to chew and destroy rubber and they're ridiculously good at it. They also really like chewing the strap between the two balls, which is still in surprisingly good condition. Most "indestructible" toys are toast within the hour. Well worth the money. Plus, the unpredictable bounce when thrown keeps the dogs busy.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 23, 2026
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LJ
Louisville, US
★★★★★ 4
Good quality ball for large dog, easy to clean
Size: Large, Style: Ultra Tug
It’s challenging to review this because I bought it for my son’s dog, and it doesn’t interest him at all, even though he likes and plays with regular balls. The ball appears to be good quality, which is typical for this brand. He likes to play tug of war, so I thought the combination with a ball would be a hit. The strap looks durable, so time will tell if he develops an interest in playing with this at some point. The ball is hard rubber and fairly heavy, so it should hold up to an aggressive chewer. It doesn’t squeak or make any other noise. It bounces unpredictably and erratically because of the attached strap. Both the strap and ball are easy to clean with soap and water.
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Reviewed in the United States on December 30, 2025

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