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  #21  
Old 06-05-2014, 07:54 AM
Dante1709 Dante1709 is offline
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Join Date: Nov 2013
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Location: Windsor, Ontario
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Originally Posted by NYCorchidman View Post
Yes, pitcher plants!
They were the short tubby looking plants with mostly green and yellow.
I guess I killed it by drying it up.

I would love to have tall skinny variety with white/red colored lid ( no idea what the correct name of that structure at the opening of the "tube").
That's probably Sarracenia leucophylla. It's a gorgeous plant and you can find it in many hybrids.

I'd try to find a species that is hardy to your area, and grow it outdoors. They need full sun, and a winter dormancy.
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  #22  
Old 06-05-2014, 10:31 AM
Paul Paul is offline
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Join Date: Jul 2006
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Location: Michigan
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Flower stalk method, does it matter if flowers are already open or not?
Nope.


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Originally Posted by NYCorchidman View Post
Also, do you plant the cut spike upright having the cut end in the moss (or whatever else one might choose to pot the thing in) or just lay the whole thing sideway?
Generally one lays the cutting on its side ... pressed down (but not buried) in the media. High humidity and keeping the media constantly moist is necessary.


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Well, ever since it got here, the drier air (I believe is the reason) seems to have caused my ping produce much sticky substance.
With both Drosera (sundews) and pings, the amount of dew produced is generally a function of the amount/intensity of light received. The more light, the more dew.



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Originally Posted by NYCorchidman View Post
My venus flytrap seems too large for gnats. never seen it catch anything but I actually go out and catch bugs myself to feed it (and to see the trap snap close haha).
Gnats are far too small for vfts unless, perhaps, they are young seedlings. It generally takes much larger prey to trigger the trigger hairs on a vft trap. Despite their name, in the wild, their most common prey are ants.



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Originally Posted by NYCorchidman View Post
I also tried this tube shaped carnivorous plant last year. I don't think it attracted anything either.
Pitcher plants tend to catch larger prey like hornets, flies, etc.


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Originally Posted by NYCorchidman View Post
I see them available again now at Whole Foods market, but I don't find them cute anymore. well, at least the variety they carry.
BBS often carry them -- usually in those little acrylic cubes that are the death of pretty much any plant.


Quote:
Originally Posted by NYCorchidman View Post
Yes, pitcher plants!
They were the short tubby looking plants with mostly green and yellow.
I guess I killed it by drying it up.
Most probably. Particularly when in active growth, sarrs want constant moisture. You can leave many in a tray filled with water as they do well with "wet feet". Some types require a cold winter dormancy to maintain vigor.

Quote:
Originally Posted by NYCorchidman View Post
I would love to have tall skinny variety with white/red colored lid ( no idea what the correct name of that structure at the opening of the "tube").
Here's a pic from the web to answer some of your basic anatomy Qs:
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedi..._basic.svg.png
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  #23  
Old 06-05-2014, 03:31 PM
Skycat Skycat is offline
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Originally Posted by Paul View Post
Nope.




Generally one lays the cutting on its side ... pressed down (but not buried) in the media. High humidity and keeping the media constantly moist is necessary.
It also works to plant it upright, though. That's what I did.
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  #24  
Old 06-06-2014, 03:25 PM
NYCorchidman NYCorchidman is offline
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Thank you for all the wonderful answers, Paul!
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