I loooooove the idea of a cactus snake!I saw a crawling cactus at the Cal State Botanical Gardens in Berkeley. Also known as a creeping devil, this columnar cactus "crawls" across the desert floor by growing at one end while dying at the other end. In real life this happens at the pace of plant growth but I see no reason we couldn't make it faster and more vampiric.
Here's a zygomind from one of the Pathfinder Bestiaries:A while back, I saw one of these growing near my classroom:
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(Photo Credit: wikimedia)
It's called a Latticed Stinkhorn or Red Cage. It's a very cool fungus. It starts as a white egg-like thing, then erupts into this cage structure.
Yeah, I think it was in one of the Monstrous Compendium Annuals towards the tail end of AD&D 2EWasn't there a hangman's tree someplace.
I updated much of this in a product on DMsguild, which is a mediocre product and I tried some things with statblock that didn't work like I wanted. I really recommend these articles, most of them are well written and offers stuff for any campaign.There were a few good system neutral articles providing plants in old Dragon magazines:
Aside from the ones that are based on just awful puns, there are some cool ideas in there!
- "Wounds and Weeds" by Kevin J. Anderson (#82) gave some healing rules and descriptions of twelve real-world herbs: Aaron's rod, adder's-tongue, birthwort, comfrey, garlic, henbane, herb true-love, juniper berry, marsh-mallow, St.-John's-wort, sphagnum moss, and woundwort.
- "The Legacy of Hortus" by Jack Crane (#87) provided descriptions of fifteen fanciful animal-plant hybrids: beebalm, butterfly flowers, catnip, cobra orchids, cowslips, dandelions, foxglove, horehound, lambs ear, parrot tulips, smartweed, snake vine, snap dragons, tiger lilies, and wormwood.
- "The Plants of Biurndon" by Eric W. Pass (#108) gives descriptions of thirteen trees and herbs from the author's home campaign: sticktree, rivertree, papertree, medicinetree, redtree, natertree, lenthal, graveolens, boneset, redoil, angelica, blue tonic, and felamour.
- "The Ecology of Carnivorous Plants" by Gregg Chamberlain (#137) covers carnivorous plants in both the real world and in gaming; he doesn't provide any new plants, but discusses the carnivorous plants in various AD&D books.
- "The Dragon's Bestiary" by Gregg Chamberlain (#167) has AD&D stats for eight monstrous plants: giant bladderwort, giant butterwort, giant rainbow plant, giant waterwheel plant, swordgrass, clubfern, bloodflower, and hellborn.
- "The Dragon's Bestiary: Bad Seeds" by Ed Bonny, Skip Williams, and Steve Winter (#292) has seven plant/fungus monsters: death’s head tree, greenvise, myconid, needleman, orcwort, wortling, and red sundew.
- "Arcane Botanica" by Noel Scott (#357) talks about twelve new magical plants: djinn blossoms, nahre lotus, orevine, salamander orchids, aelfengrape, coldwood, fey cherry, flame clove, glowvine, lakeleaf, lichbriar, and tahtoalehti (aka, wishfern).