Cactus · Sonoran native

Claret Cup Hedgehog

Echinocereus triglochidiatus · Cactaceae

Also called: Claret Cup Cactus, Kingcup Cactus, Mojave Mound Cactus, Hedgehog Cactus

Native

Claret Cup Hedgehog (Echinocereus triglochidiatus) is a very low-water cactus native to the Sonoran Desert region well suited to Tucson and the low desert. It thrives in full sun in the low desert, with a slow growth rate.

Claret Cup Hedgehog (Echinocereus triglochidiatus) growing in Tucson
Photo: Dave Powell, USDA Forest Service, United States (CC BY-SA 3.0) · Wikimedia Commons

Claret Cup Hedgehog at a glance

Water use
Very Low (established)
Sun
Full sun in the low desert; light afternoon shade is beneficial at hot, reflected-heat Tucson sites to prevent scald.
Mature size
6-18 in H x 12-36 in W (forms dense rounded mounds that can reach 2-3 ft or more across with many stems over time)
Growth rate
Slow
Bloom
Scarlet to orange-red (waxy, cup-shaped flowers that stay open day and night for several days), Spring (April-May).
Cold hardiness
Very cold hardy, to roughly -10 to -20 F (USDA zones 5-9); one of the most cold-tolerant cacti.
Soil
Fast-draining gravelly, rocky, or sandy soils; intolerant of standing water. Excellent drainage is essential, especially in summer monsoon rains.
Native range
Widespread across the southwestern U.S. — Arizona, New Mexico, Utah, Colorado, Nevada, west Texas, and Sonora/Chihuahua, Mexico; in Arizona more typical of higher-elevation desert, grassland, and chaparral than the lowest hot flats.
Best used as
Specimen / accent in rock and cactus gardens, Hummingbird and pollinator gardens, Higher-elevation and transition-zone xeriscapes, Container plantings, Naturalistic desert landscapes
Wildlife
Distinctive red, tubular, day-lasting flowers are one of the few cacti pollinated largely by hummingbirds; also visited by native bees. Fruits eaten by birds and rodents.
Toxicity
Non-toxic; fruit is edible. Spines are the only hazard.

How to grow Claret Cup Hedgehog in Tucson & the low desert

Watering

Once established, essentially rainfall-dependent. Provide occasional deep water only during extended drought; keep dry in winter. Excess summer irrigation in poorly drained soil causes rot.

Fertilizer & nutrients

Not required. At most, one light spring application of dilute low-nitrogen cactus fertilizer; native desert soils are adequate.

Pruning & care

None needed. Remove damaged or rotted stems cleanly and allow to callus.

Notes

Prized for brilliant red hummingbird-pollinated flowers and exceptional cold hardiness. A taxonomically variable species; several former segregates are now lumped under it. Performs best in Tucson with sharp drainage and a touch of afternoon shade. Use nursery-grown stock.

Sources: Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum; University of Arizona Cooperative Extension; AMWUA 'Landscape Plants for the Arizona Desert'; Tohono Chul / Tucson Botanical Gardens

← Back to the full Tucson Plant & Garden Library