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Crude photo of young n. pilosa pitcher

Hello. I would just like to show off a crude photo of my young (very young) N. pilosa that I received a while ago:
N.pilosa.jpg

This is the first pitcher that it has produced while in my care. It had 2 other pitchers when i got it. I guess I am pretty excited about it. You can't see it in the blurry photo, but it is covered in hairs.

Just so that coming to this post was not a complete wast of time, here are some others:

N.coccinea.jpg

N. xcoccinea. I like its peristome and it has a nice lid too. The pitchers are getting bulkyer and more wine red as each one is produced. I currently keep this lowlander in my highland tank, but it seems to do fine there.

P.ehlersea.jpg

I guess I'm not a complete failure at pings. These are cuttings of my P. ehlersae that actually sprouted.

S.seedlings.jpg

A few sarr hybrid seedlings. I ran out of pots when I was reppotting these, so i have 3 distinct groups in one pot. I made sure that I can identify them later on with marks on the pots and a map on a piece of paper. For some reason, I find that my sarr seedlings are prone to fungus. Most of the time they dont die, but it's pretty darn close.

Hope you enjoyed them
biggrin.gif
. A few other pictures comeing in the next few weeks, as soon as my burbidgea opens a swelling pitcher that is almost done ;) . Zongyi
 
Oh, Pond boy, to be technical N. coccinea is actualy a hybrid of mirabilis x (rafflesiana x ampullaria). N. hookeriana being a hybrid N. rafflesiana x N. ampullaria it can be said that cocciena has hookeriana in it...
 
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