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Parodia is a genus of flowering plants in the cactus family Cactaceae. The genus is named after the Argentine botanist Lorenzo Raimundo Parodi who lived from 1895 to 1966. Flowers in all species arise from fuzzy buds, typically with bristles, at the apex. Flowers are cup-shaped and point straight up. They are easy to grow, have intriguing stems and spines and flower easily with brightly-coloured flowers. This fact in combination with their relatively small size, ensure that nearly all cactus growers will have some representative of this group. While advanced hobbyists may grow many of the various species and subspecies.
Parodia haselbergii ssp. graessneri is not nearly as well known in cultivation as Parodia haselbergii. Like that old favourite, it has globular stems densely clothed in pale spination with barely distinguishable centrals. In fact, these forms are so similar as to be indistinguishable in the vegetative state. The main difference is the vivid flower colours that are opposite but complementary. The familiar Parodia haselbergii has bright orange (red in brighter light) petals in an arrangement resembling the cellophane flourish atop a sandwich toothpick. The flowers of Parodia haselbergii ssp. graessneri have a similar, almost day-glow, quality but in emerald green.
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