cactus resembling the prickly pear Buy Engleman's Prickly Pear Phoenix, AZ | Opuntia engelmannii
SKU: 25133214628
cactus resembling the prickly pear

cactus resembling the prickly pear Buy Engleman's Prickly Pear Phoenix, AZ | Opuntia engelmannii

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Description

cactus resembling the prickly pear Buy Engleman's Prickly Pear Phoenix, AZ | Opuntia engelmanniiArizonas Toughest Native Prickly Pear for Authentic Desert Landscapes Englemans Prickly Pear (Opuntia engelmannii) is the quintessential Arizona native cactus the one you see across every hillside, wash, and natural desert area in the Phoenix Valley. Its broad blue green pads, showy yellow spring flowers, and deep red fruit (tunas) make it one of the most visually dynamic plants in the Sonoran Desert. For homeowners in Scottsdale, Mesa, Chandler,

Arizona’s Toughest Native Prickly Pear for Authentic Desert Landscapes

Engleman’s Prickly Pear (Opuntia engelmannii) is the quintessential Arizona native cactus — the one you see across every hillside, wash, and natural desert area in the Phoenix Valley. Its broad blue-green pads, showy yellow spring flowers, and deep red fruit (tunas) make it one of the most visually dynamic plants in the Sonoran Desert. For homeowners in Scottsdale, Mesa, Chandler, Gilbert, Tempe, and Glendale who want an authentic native landscape, Engleman’s Prickly Pear delivers the real Arizona look with zero fuss.

Engleman’s Prickly Pear Plant Details

Attribute Detail
Scientific Name Opuntia engelmannii
Common Names Engleman’s Prickly Pear, Cactus Apple, Desert Prickly Pear
Mature Height 3–6 feet
Mature Width 4–8 feet
Growth Rate Moderate — 1–2 new pads per season in Phoenix
Sun Full sun (6+ hrs). Handles reflected heat from walls and pavement.
Water Extremely low. Survives on rainfall alone once established.
USDA Zones 8–11 (Phoenix is Zone 9b–10a)
Soil Any well-draining soil. Thrives in Arizona caliche and rocky native soil.
Foliage Evergreen — blue-green pads year-round
Bloom Bright yellow flowers in April–May, followed by red-purple fruit
Native Status Native to Arizona and the Sonoran Desert

Engleman’s Prickly Pear Uses in Phoenix Landscapes

Native & Restoration Landscapes

As a true Arizona native, Engleman’s Prickly Pear is the cornerstone of authentic desert landscaping. Plant it alongside Palo Verde trees, Desert Spoon, and Brittlebush for a landscape that looks like it’s always been there. It’s the top choice for HOA-approved native plant palettes in Scottsdale, Cave Creek, and Fountain Hills.

Wildlife & Pollinator Gardens

The spring flowers attract native bees, butterflies, and hummingbirds. The red fruit feeds Gila woodpeckers, cactus wrens, and other desert birds through summer and fall. Javelina, rabbits, and tortoises also feed on the pads. If you want a landscape that supports local wildlife in Mesa, Gilbert, or Chandler, this is your plant.

Xeriscape Borders & Property Lines

A mature Engleman’s Prickly Pear creates a natural, thorny barrier that discourages foot traffic. Plant 4–5 feet apart along a property line or fence for a low, sprawling native border. The spines and glochids make it an effective (and beautiful) natural deterrent.

Desert Rock Gardens

Pair with Golden Barrel, Mexican Fence Post, and Purple Prickly Pear for a diverse cactus garden with contrasting shapes, colors, and textures. The broad, flat pads of Engleman’s contrast beautifully with the round barrels and tall columns.

Best Time to Plant Engleman’s Prickly Pear in Phoenix

Fall (October–November) is ideal — warm soil and cooler air give roots time to establish before summer. Spring (February–April) is the second-best window. This native cactus can actually be planted year-round in Phoenix, but avoid the peak heat of June–August for best results.

How to Plant Engleman’s Prickly Pear

  1. Dig wide, not deep — excavate 2–3x the root ball width at the same depth as the container.
  2. Check for caliche — break through any hardpan layer for drainage, though prickly pear is more tolerant of poor drainage than most cacti.
  3. Backfill with native soil — no amendments needed. This cactus grows in pure desert soil.
  4. Spacing — 4–6 feet apart for a natural grouping; 3 feet for a denser border.
  5. Water basin — build a 3–4 inch soil ring to direct water to roots during establishment.
  6. Mulch with gravel — 2–3 inches of natural desert rock or decomposed granite.

Watering Engleman’s Prickly Pear in Phoenix

First Year Watering Schedule

Weeks 1–2: Water every 5–7 days, deep and slow. Month 1–3: Every 10–14 days. Month 3–6: Every 2–3 weeks. After Year 1: Little to no supplemental water needed. This native survives on Phoenix rainfall alone.

Drip Irrigation

Place one 1 GPH emitter 12–18 inches from the base for the first year only. After establishment, remove or cap the emitter. Overwatering is the #1 killer of prickly pear in irrigated landscapes — once established, leave it alone.

How fast does Engleman’s Prickly Pear grow?
Expect 1–2 new pads per growing season. A 1 gallon plant will fill out to a 3–4 foot clump within 3–4 years. Our larger sizes (10/15G and 25G) give you an established, multi-pad specimen from day one.

Is it messy? Do pads fall off?
Prickly pear pads can detach in strong wind or if bumped by animals. Fallen pads often root where they land — which is how the cactus naturally propagates. Plant away from walkways and play areas to avoid accidental contact with spines and glochids.

Are the fruit edible?
Yes! The red-purple fruit (tunas) are a traditional Sonoran Desert food. They’re sweet and can be used in jams, syrups, and agua fresca. Harvest with tongs and burn off the glochids before handling.

What’s the difference between Engleman’s and Purple Prickly Pear?
Engleman’s has blue-green pads year-round with yellow flowers and red fruit. Purple Prickly Pear (Opuntia santa-rita) has pads that turn vibrant purple in cold weather and drought stress, with yellow flowers and purple fruit. Both are native — Purple is showier, Engleman’s is more robust.

You May Also Like

Purple Prickly Pear — A showier native prickly pear with dramatic purple pads in winter. Great companion planting for color variety.
Golden Barrel (Bareroot) — Round golden-spined barrel cactus that contrasts perfectly with flat prickly pear pads.
Mexican Fence Post — Tall columnar cactus for vertical accent behind sprawling prickly pear.
Parry’s Agave — A compact silvery-blue native agave that complements the blue-green tones of Engleman’s.
Foxtail Agave — A graceful arching agave that adds a different texture alongside the broad pads of prickly pear.

How Many Engleman's Prickly Pear Do I Need?

Engleman's Prickly Pear spreads wide, so space it generously. For a natural thorny barrier or property-line screen, plant on 5 foot centers, measured to the broad 4 to 8 foot mature width. For a looser native grouping, space 6 feet apart and plant in odd numbers so the clumps read naturally. Keep all plantings at least 3 to 4 feet back from walkways, drives, and pool decks because of the spines and glochids.

Run Length Spacing Plants Needed
10 ft barrier 5 ft on center 2 to 3
20 ft barrier 5 ft on center 4 to 5
40 ft barrier 5 ft on center 8 to 9

Engleman's Prickly Pear Season-by-Season in Phoenix

  • Spring (Feb to Apr): The showcase season. Bright yellow flowers open in April and May, drawing native bees, butterflies, and hummingbirds, and new pads begin to push. Strong secondary planting window.
  • Summer (May to Sep): Built for Valley heat and reflected sun, thriving on rainfall once established. Red-purple fruit ripens through summer and the monsoon, feeding desert birds. Avoid overwatering, which is the main risk in irrigated yards.
  • Fall (Oct to Nov): Prime planting season and continued fruiting. This native can go in nearly year-round, but fall gives the easiest establishment.
  • Winter (Dec to Jan): Evergreen blue-green pads hold through winter. Exceptionally cold-hardy for the Valley, shrugging off normal frost without protection.

At a Glance

✔ Arizona Native   ✔ Heat-Loving (Reflected-Heat Tolerant)   ✔ Drought-Tolerant   ✔ Pollinator-Friendly   ✔ Hummingbird-Friendly   ✔ Edible   ✔ Evergreen   ✔ Low-Maintenance   ✔ Fire-Wise   ✔ Cold-Hardy to 15°F

Plant It With

  • Giant Prickly Pear: a larger blue-green Opuntia that builds depth in a native prickly-pear grouping.
  • Mexican Fence Post: tall columns that give vertical contrast behind the sprawling pads.
  • Golden Barrel: round golden globes that play off the flat pad shapes.
  • Desert Spoon: a silvery native accent that softens the cactus textures and ties the bed to the Sonoran palette.

Is Engleman's Prickly Pear Right for Your Yard?

This native thrives in full sun and reflected heat, in any well-draining native or caliche soil, with the open space its 4 to 8 foot spread needs. It is the cornerstone plant for authentic Sonoran landscapes, wildlife gardens, and natural barriers, and it lives on rainfall once established. It is not a fit close to walkways, patios, or play areas, where the spines and glochids are a hazard, and note that rabbits and javelina will browse the pads, so it is not a good choice where that wildlife pressure is heavy and unwanted.

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Jaren
Charlottesville, US
★★★★★ 5
Being “Othered” is Real
Format: Kindle
Sky Full of Elephants opens with a haunting and unforgettable image: all the white people walking silently into bodies of water. That beginning alone tells you this is not a book that will play it safe. It is bold, layered, and deeply intentional. The writing is beautiful and the story forces readers to confront what Black history truly is: American history. The novel doesn’t just imagine a world; it holds up a mirror to the one we’ve lived in and the one we’re still shaping. It explores identity, belonging, grief, and survival in a way that feels both speculative and painfully real. As someone who grew up attending predominantly white schools, I connected deeply with Sidney’s experiences. Being “othered” (constantly reminded that you are different, that you don’t quite belong) leaves marks that follow you long after childhood ends. Some of the moments Sidney endures felt painfully familiar, and I found myself reflecting on my own younger self while reading. What struck me most, though, was reading this story as a mother. I have a biracial daughter, and her experience has been very different. She has never been made to feel like she doesn’t belong. She has never been othered. She has always been rooted in her Black identity, primarily raised by her Black mother, surrounded by family who affirm her. Even after I remarried and joined a Black family, she was embraced fully, never questioned, never treated as “less than,” never made to feel separate. Reading Sidney’s journey made me profoundly grateful that my daughter’s story has unfolded differently. It also reminded me how much environment, affirmation, and community matter in shaping a child’s sense of self. Sky Full of Elephants is more than a speculative novel. It is a meditation on race, memory, and belonging. It asks hard questions about America while honoring the fullness and complexity of Black identity. This book lingers with you. It sparks reflection. It opens conversations. And for me, it felt both personal and powerful.
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Reviewed in the United States on February 14, 2026
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S. Donaldson
Belleville, US
★★★★★ 4
Good Read!
Format: Audiobook
I read this along with my son and his girlfriend in a family “book club”. We had a good discussion about the ending, as we each had differing perspectives, but that was fun! The book was really interesting, and the characters were so well defined and deeply moving. Good read, but the ending left us a little confused.
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Reviewed in the United States on March 16, 2026
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Katherine Ross
Belleville, US
★★★★★ 5
Thought provoking
Format: Kindle
Sky Full of Elephants is a work of speculative fiction that begins with the premise that the white population of the United States has been wiped out. Starting a year after “the event” and following Charlie, a man who spent 20 years in prison due to a cowardly lie, and his resentful, biracial 19 year old daughter, who witnessed her only known family drown themselves, it is at its core a quest for identity in its many forms and how trauma can co-opt that search. In rating and reviewing this book, I’m aware that my lens as a Gen-X, cis-het, white woman, will have a differing view from others’ lived experiences. In reading other reviews, I definitely saw points that I didn’t consider, which I hope is the main point of the book. I do think, as a work of speculative fiction, that it does require the suspension of disbelief from the get go. It is a philosophical “what if” that Mr. Campbell invites the reader to consider. Intrigued by the premise, I was drawn into the story due to Mr. Campbell’s lyrical writing style. The narrative had a rhythmical flow to it that supported the world building and characterizations. I found Charlie to be a very sympathetic character, rebuilding a life shattered by lies in a new world and confronted with the daughter he never had a chance to know. Sydney, Charlie’s daughter, was more of a struggle to empathize with. While her feelings were justified and understandable, her growth throughout the novel was erratic. As the story has an ambiguous ending, perhaps her character will continue to improve. For supporting cast, the grumpy pilot Sailor and his nonbinary child, Zu, offer a counterpoint to Charlie and Sidney’s emerging relationship. The king and queen of Alabama and the thriving town of Mobile were well fleshed out. The Walkers and Sidney’s Aunt Agatha in Orange Beach represented those who were lost in their own way, either due to clinging to their former proximity to whiteness or to the religious biases they were raised with. I found the Walkers to be the most tragic of all. The questions of identity throughout the story are what kept be invested throughout. Are we defined by the color of our skin, our behaviors, the groups we belong to, the choices we make? Are others more valuable or worthy who don’t suffer the same things we do? Does there have to be those that are “lesser” to make us feel whole? As a trauma survivor with C-PTSD, I struggle with my own issues of identity and worthiness, and as a former Special Education teacher, I’ve been witness to that struggle in others. I have never understood or accepted the idea of White Supremacy or Christian Supremacy or any of the myriad ways that humanity continues to other each of us. In reality, there is no “us” or “them” only”we”. Charlie questions who he is as a Black man in the US, a convict, a teacher, a father, and ultimately a fixer and healer. Sidney grapples with her biracial otherness, her wealthy upbringing and sheltered life, the trauma of abandonment, and the lies that her life was built on. The ethical question of the machine at the epicenter of the event adds another layer to the story. While the effects of the first usage were unintended, once they were known is it right to continue to fix it and use it again? Can healing a part of collectiveness that harms or destroys another part ultimately be worth the cost? The world and its people are broken and desperately need healing. But just like the question of eugenics, what of value is lost when specific traits are universally stripped away? And who gets the to decide what is of value anyway? The ambiguity of the ending doesn’t answer the question entirely of what happens when the machine is repaired, but Charlie’s ability to fix things leads me hopeful. Personally, I cared enough about these characters to be interested in a sequel.
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Reviewed in the United States on February 24, 2026
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Patrice Ingram
New York, US
★★★★★ 5
A book that makes you think!
Format: Paperback
This was a super good read, very imaginative. It dealt with identity, belonging, insecurities, family matters. The way it was written was unlike any book I’ve read this year.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 4, 2026
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GorgeousDreamer
Natrona Heights, US
★★★★★ 3
The Possibilities
Format: Kindle
Despite its potential, this book ultimately failed to resonate with me. I found myself repeatedly compelled to put it down, as the focus on the empowerment aspect was overshadowed by the narrative’s preoccupation with re-triggering ourselves through the perpetuation of a harmful lie. This lie, which has tragically cost many Black men their lives and livelihoods, diverted our attention from the more profound themes of rebuilding culture, redefining ourselves, and creating a new world. Instead of exploring the possibility of a beautiful utopia, we were subjected to a process of de-centering ourselves and centering them, their likeness, and the relentless pursuit of proving our worth. While there were indeed wise words that moved me, I was left questioning the purpose of dedicating so much time to those who did not share our sentiments. Who are these individuals who required our convincing, and who are we who felt compelled to do so? I found Sydney, her family, and the inhabitants of Orange Beach to be unlikable characters. I fear that the plot was compromised when the focus shifted to inclusion.
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Reviewed in the United States on April 5, 2026

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