In a way, A saguaro is usually at least 40 years old before it starts sprouting arms.
There is no way to tell the exact age of a cactus. Unlike trees you can count rings, but for cacti some believe like the saguaro cactus you can use the arms to tell the age, but in the life span of a saguaro it can grow at different rates. if you have to estimate a saguaro it takes the base an average of about 60 years to grow to the size of a male adult.
No, it may take over 100 years for the cactus to sprout its first arms.
Contact Olympic Arms and they can tell you.
Age.
yes they can. i touched a cactus then it got all over. now i have a rash on my arms. its all bumby.
eagle eating snake on a cactus in some water
Really, really old.
Really, really old.
The look of a fully grown cactus depends upon the particular cactus. For example, jumping cactus [Cylindropuntia fulgida] sheds its perilous spines once it's fully grown and heading into old age. In the way of another example, old man cactus [Cephalocereus senilisand Oreocereus spp] becomes enveloped in a downy beard from its fine, long, soft, white outer spines. As yet another example, the giant saguaro cactus [Carnegiea gigantea] finds its towering columnar profile enhanced with branching arms once fully grown.
The Mexican flag has a vertical tricolor of green, white, and red with the national coat of arms (The coat of arms depicts a Mexican golden eagle perched on a prickly pear cactus devouring a snake.). The Coat of Arms represents an old Mexican legend where the Aztecs where supposed to settle on a land "where an eagle landed on a prickly-pear cactus, eating a snake... " When they found a eagle on top of the cactus, they settled there and named it Tenochtitlan, where it is now present-day Mexico CityBolded -Your Direct Answer
You must call TC
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