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cinnamon cactus plant

cinnamon cactus plant Buy Cinnamon Prickly Pear Phoenix, AZ | O. microdasys

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Description

cinnamon cactus plant Buy Cinnamon Prickly Pear Phoenix, AZ | O. microdasysPhoenix's Warmest Bunny Ear Cactus Cinnamon Brown Dots That Glow in Desert Light Cinnamon Dot Prickly Pear (Opuntia microdasys 'Cinnamon') is the warm toned sibling of the classic Bunny Ear Cactus family and one of the most unique small cacti you can grow in the Phoenix Valley. This compact Mexican native forms neat, bushy clumps of bright green pads covered in dense clusters of reddish brown glochids that give the plant a warm, cinnamon speckled

Phoenix's Warmest Bunny Ear Cactus — Cinnamon-Brown Dots That Glow in Desert Light

Cinnamon Dot Prickly Pear (Opuntia microdasys 'Cinnamon') is the warm-toned sibling of the classic Bunny Ear Cactus family — and one of the most unique small cacti you can grow in the Phoenix Valley. This compact Mexican native forms neat, bushy clumps of bright green pads covered in dense clusters of reddish-brown glochids that give the plant a warm, cinnamon-speckled appearance. Growing just 1–2 feet tall and 2–3 feet wide, it's perfectly sized for containers, rock gardens, and accent plantings. In late spring, it may produce yellow to orange blooms that complement the warm-toned dots beautifully. Whether you're building a desert container collection in Scottsdale, adding warm texture to a Gilbert rock garden, or creating a unique indoor display in Tempe — Cinnamon Dot Prickly Pear adds warmth, character, and zero-fuss charm.

Cinnamon Dot Prickly Pear Plant Details

Attribute Detail
Scientific Name Opuntia microdasys 'Cinnamon'
Common Names Cinnamon Dot Prickly Pear, Cinnamon Bunny Ear Cactus
Mature Height 1–2 feet
Mature Width 2–3 feet
Growth Rate Moderate — 1–2 new pads per season in Phoenix
Sun Full sun to partial shade (6+ hrs ideal). Handles reflected heat.
Water Very low once established. Highly drought-tolerant.
USDA Zones 9–11 (Phoenix is Zone 9b–10a)
Soil Well-draining sandy or loamy soil. Adapts to Arizona caliche with added drainage.
Foliage Evergreen — bright green pads year-round
Bloom Color Yellow to orange, late spring to early summer
Special Feature Dense cinnamon-brown glochids create a warm, speckled appearance

Cinnamon Dot Prickly Pear Uses in Phoenix Landscapes

Container and Patio Gardens

Cinnamon Dot Prickly Pear is one of the best cacti for decorative containers. Its compact size and warm-toned dots make it a conversation piece on any patio, porch, or pool deck. Use a wide, shallow pot with well-draining cactus mix and a gravel top-dressing. Pair with its White Dot sibling for a stunning warm-and-cool contrast in matching pots on a Scottsdale courtyard or Chandler front entry.

Rock Garden Accent

The cinnamon-brown dots create beautiful warm contrast against gray decomposed granite, flagstone, and light-colored boulders. Plant among a curated desert bed with Agave, Golden Barrel Cactus, and Desert Spoon for a textured, low-water rock garden. The compact form means it won't outgrow its space — perfect for small planting pockets and garden vignettes.

Indoor Desert Display

Like its White Dot cousin, Cinnamon Dot does well indoors near a bright, south-facing window. Its small size and moderate growth make it ideal for windowsill collections, sunroom displays, or as a living sculpture on a desk or shelf. Just ensure good drainage and minimal watering indoors.

Color-Contrast Companion Planting

Plant Cinnamon Dot alongside White Dot Prickly Pear for a striking warm-and-cool pairing. The cinnamon-brown and white glochid clusters create visual contrast on otherwise identical plant forms — one of the most eye-catching combinations in desert container and rock garden design. Add a Purple Prickly Pear behind them for a three-color desert palette.

Best Time to Plant Cinnamon Dot Prickly Pear in Phoenix

Fall (October–November) is ideal for planting. Warm soil promotes root growth while cooler air reduces transplant stress, giving the plant 6–8 months to establish before its first Phoenix summer. Spring (February–April) is the second-best window. Avoid summer planting when possible — the extreme heat makes establishment harder for small plants.

How to Plant Cinnamon Dot Prickly Pear

  1. Dig wide, not deep — excavate a hole 2x the root ball width but only as deep as the root ball itself.
  2. Check for caliche — break through any hardpan layer for drainage. Standing water will rot cactus roots quickly.
  3. Backfill with amended soil — mix native soil with 30–40% pumice, perlite, or decomposed granite for sharp drainage.
  4. Spacing — 2–3 feet apart for a grouped planting; 3–4 feet for standalone specimens.
  5. No water basin needed — keep the grade flat or slightly mounded to prevent water pooling around the base.
  6. Gravel mulch — 2–3 inches of decorative gravel around the base keeps moisture away from the crown and prevents rot.

Watering Cinnamon Dot Prickly Pear in Phoenix

First Year Watering Schedule

  • Weeks 1–2: Water deeply every 3–4 days to settle soil around roots.
  • Month 1–3: Every 7–10 days, deep and slow.
  • Month 3–6: Every 2–3 weeks.
  • After Year 1: Little to no supplemental water needed. Once a month during extreme summer heat is more than sufficient. No winter irrigation required.

Drip Irrigation

If using drip, place a single 0.5–1 GPH emitter 8–12 inches from the base. Run it very infrequently — overwatering is the most common mistake with this cactus. Once established, it can survive on rainfall alone in most Phoenix Valley locations.

How fast does Cinnamon Dot Prickly Pear grow in Phoenix?
Moderately. Expect 1–2 new pads per growing season. A 1 gallon plant will fill out to its mature 2 foot spread in about 3–4 years with minimal care.

Is Cinnamon Dot Prickly Pear drought tolerant once established?
Extremely. This is one of the most drought-tolerant plants you can grow. Once established, it thrives on rainfall alone and needs almost no supplemental water.

What's the difference between Cinnamon Dot and White Dot Prickly Pear?
Both are varieties of Opuntia microdasys with the same growth habit and care needs. The difference is the glochid color — Cinnamon Dot has warm reddish-brown clusters while White Dot has white clusters. Both make excellent companions when planted together for color contrast.

Can Cinnamon Dot Prickly Pear grow indoors?
Yes — it's one of the few prickly pears that does well indoors. Place it near a bright south or west-facing window, use well-draining cactus mix, and water sparingly. It makes an excellent desk or windowsill plant.

Will it produce flowers?
It can produce yellow to orange blooms in late spring to early summer, though flowering is less consistent in cultivation than in wild plants. The warm cinnamon-dotted pads are the main attraction regardless of bloom.

You May Also Like

  • White Dot Prickly Pear — Same adorable bunny ear shape with bright white dots instead of cinnamon. Plant them together for beautiful warm-and-cool contrast.
  • Beavertail Prickly Pear — Spineless pads with stunning magenta-pink spring blooms. Another compact, pool-friendly prickly pear.
  • Baby Rita Prickly Pear — Compact purple-tinted pads with bright magenta flowers. A colorful dwarf prickly pear perfect for small spaces.
  • Blind Prickly Pear — Smooth, virtually spineless pads with a clean modern look. Great for pool areas and high-traffic landscapes.
  • Purple Prickly Pear — Dramatic purple-tinted pads that intensify in cold and drought. Pairs beautifully with both Bunny Ear varieties.

How Many Cinnamon Dot Prickly Pear Do I Need?

Cinnamon Dot is a compact prickly pear that matures just 2 to 3 feet wide, so it shines in containers and small planting pockets rather than long runs. Plant single as a container or rock-garden accent, or in a small cluster of 3 spaced about 2.5 feet apart for a fuller low mound. For a low accent border, figure roughly 2.5 foot centers:

Border Length Plants Needed (2.5 ft spacing)
5 ft 2 to 3 plants
10 ft 4 to 5 plants
15 ft 6 to 7 plants
20 ft 8 to 9 plants

The reddish-brown glochids detach on contact and are tedious to remove from skin, so keep pots and plantings off the edges of walkways, patios, and pool decks.

Cinnamon Dot Prickly Pear Season-by-Season in Phoenix

  • Spring (Feb to Apr): New pads flush as soil warms, and the plant may open yellow-to-orange blooms in late spring. A strong second planting window once frost risk passes.
  • Summer (May to Sep): Tough in heat and reflected sun, though in the most brutal west-facing spots a little afternoon shade keeps the pads from scorching. Monsoon humidity (Jul to Sep) is the time to back off water so the fast-draining mix never stays soggy.
  • Fall (Oct to Nov): Prime planting season. Warm soil and mild air let this small plant settle in before winter.
  • Winter (Dec to Jan): Evergreen green pads hold, but this is a frost-tender Mexican species. Expect damage in the mid to upper 20s°F: site it in a warm microclimate, grow it in a pot you can move, or cover it on hard frost nights.

At a Glance

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

Plant It With

  • Crested Microdasys: a crested cousin in the same Opuntia microdasys family, perfect alongside for a collector's container grouping.
  • Baby Rita: a compact purple-tinted dwarf prickly pear that adds color contrast next to the warm cinnamon dots.
  • Beavertail Prickly Pear: a low, magenta-blooming prickly pear that fills the next size up in a small desert bed.
  • Blind Prickly Pear: a smooth, fuller prickly pear that anchors the back of a rock-garden vignette.

Is Cinnamon Dot Prickly Pear Right for Your Yard?

Cinnamon Dot is an ideal fit for containers, rock-garden pockets, and small warm-toned accents in a bright spot with sharp drainage, and it is one of the few prickly pears that also does well indoors at a sunny window. Give it fast-draining soil and protect it from hard frost. It is not a fit for an unprotected, frost-exposed bed or for a low-spine planting near a pool deck or busy walkway, where the fine detaching glochids become a nuisance.

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I wish it had been done better
I imagine I'm going to get unhelpful votes by saying this, but this biography was not up to par with the author's other biographies. I've read Titan, which I thought was great, House of Morgan, which was really good, and Hamilton, which was also good, and this book just isn't up to those other books. The beginning was very frustrating because we learn about this supposedly very successful and widely acclaimed and established German banking family, yet there is practically nothing concerning how they got to be well known and exceedingly wealthy, nor what their business dealings were at the time. And this lack of information goes on and on, focusing almost to exclusion on inter-personal issues. Looking up the Warburgs in Wikipedia, I learned that the family had been a very successful banking family from the 1600's back in Venice, even before they settled in Warburg, Germany. Starting the narrative in the mid to late 1800's with the success of Jews in what was to become Germany just left me hanging and feeling like I was missing a large part of who the Warburgs were and how they got that way. Additionally, the family had been around for a very long time and there are scattered references to visiting or staying with uncles and aunts, but the overall breadth of the family is not addressed. Thinking about his problem now, it almost would make more sense and read better if there was a short intro and perhaps 10 separate bios on separate family members, instead of skipping around. It would help the flow. I have a feeling the author's inability to read German or Swedish or other European languages and his lack of primary research in Europe, where the Warburgs achieved fame and fortune, contributed to this incomplete biography. On the other hand, it appears that not much had been written on the Warburgs prior to this book (at least in English), and that is why I read the book. Additionally, the whole build up to the Holocaust and how the Warburgs kept their warm feelings for Germany throughout the experience, as a constant theme, was very interesting and well done, especially since I'm Jewish. The reading got more focused and poignant the closer the Holocaust got and immediately afterwards. 3 or 3.5 stars is probably the best score, but will upgrade so I don't get canned too badly. If you're interested in the Warburg it's a good starter book, though I imagine if this weren't one of the first books Chernow wrote, he would have done a better job as a more mature and accomplished biographer.
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Reviewed in the United States on April 25, 2016
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Soxaholic
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★★★★★ 5
In Depth Reading
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Ron Chernow....incredible author....Pulitzer Prize winner. Read his books....so in depth....so interesting.
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Well Worth the Lengthy Read
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Enjoyed this book. Ron Chernow writes well, captures personalities and researches extensively. I went to Woodlands High School on an estate donated by the family. These were brilliant people who stood by their values and convictions while facing anti-semitism with grace and courage.
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Barry, Toronto
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A brilliant family, cultural and business history
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What starts out as the personal and business history of a deeply religious and close family, expands into a study of the disintegration and continued importance of family, religious and cultural ties, the sources of anti-semitism and a window into some of the most dramatic moments of war and peace in the 20th century. Brilliantly researched, and interestingly written, it touches on topic after topic of importance, without pretence, and without either glorifying or deprecating the many contributions of the many Warburg family members it follows. Deserving of some high award, for sure!
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Dave
San Leandro, US
★★★★★ 4
Wow ! What a great read
Format: Hardcover
I've read most of Ron Chernows books and they all are just overpowering. The history that you will learn is astounding, and it comes to you as a wonderfully told story. The Warburgs, will put the pieces of the history puzzle together from pre-WWI Germany to the Treaty of Versailles, WWII, post-WWII Germany, plus Warburg involvement with the creation of the current US Central Bank and service on the board of the Federal Reserve. The story covers the split of the family telling the stories of those who remained in Germany some of whom suffered death in the Holocaust, while others lost wealth, position, and sanity yet one remained relatively unscathed building a library of great works while in Germany through Hitler"s reign. The journey of the family is a European, American, and Anglo journey, of a family that prospered and suffered and prospered again leaving it's mark on history for the last three centuries, and still survives.
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Reviewed in the United States on January 21, 2013

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