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  • #481
Great peristome on the alata upper. And the tentaculata rivals Mato's in tubbiness.

Mat's plant and my plant are from the same batch. It's by far the most stunning variety of tentaculata that I've seen. That pitcher opened up in between 2 pots and got a bit compressed but the next ones should develop normally.
 
  • #482
Amazing plants and a great variety to boot. Love your N. glandulifera, tenuis, Edwardsiana and others. What kind of lights do you use...T5?? :)

Thanks. I do use T5's, 4 tube fixtures. 6500k on the cool spectrum and 3500k on the warm.
 
  • #483
Cephalotus follicularis - Typical


Cephalotus follicularis - "Hummer's Giant"






Pinguicula hemiepiphytica


Genlisea lobata x violacea




Drosera menziesii ssp. menziesii Recovering nicely after the freeze.


Drosera purpurescens




Drosera cistiflora


Drosera graomogolensis


Heliamphora uncinata


Heliamphora sarracenioides


Heliamphora sp. nov. Angasima


Heliamphora nutans - "Giant"


Nepenthes singalana x hamata "Red Hairy"


Nepenthes lowii x ephippiata


Nepenthes eymae x (stenophylla x lowii)



Nepenthes fallax


Nepenthes gracilliflora


Nepenthes tobaica


Nepenthes hamata - BE #3495


Nepenthes muluensis


Nepenthes stenophylla - Bareo


Nepenthes edwardsiana - Seed Grown - Mt. Tambuyukon



Nepenthes tentaculata - Mt Kinabalu

 
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  • #484
Great update how come you use stenophyla and falax
 
  • #485
Because one came to me as a seed grown N.stenophylla and the other as a tissue cultured N.fallax.
 
  • #486
Really curious to see how the N. fallax compares to the stenophylla in the end. Great update all around, Johnny. After seeing a petiolaris dew in person yesterday, the hook is dangling ominously close..
 
  • #487
There are already some noticeable although not dramatic differences between the 2. So far the fallax is much more hairy and less glanduliferous than the stenophylla. Could just be normal variation or the age of the plants, time will tell.
 
  • #488
Is the fallax a wistuba clone?
 
  • #490
Oh ok i thought it was a name change and stenophyla was now fallax
 
  • #491
Oh ok i thought it was a name change and stenophyla was now fallax

No, some say they are different species, some claim they are synonymous with each other. For now I'll just keep them labeled as they were when they arrived.
 
  • #492
That Nepenthes tobaica is so red! And what are the plants near the tentaculata in the last picture? Are they Utrics or just weeds? The leaves on the plant with the red stem look like feathers. Very interesting.
 
  • #493
I have no idea what that is. It's some kind of fern like runner that grew out of some moss that was used as packing material for the plant. There's a flower from it in the last pic. Look down at the bottom of the pitcher, that little club like structure sticking up is the flower. That other feathery looking one is some kind of Mimosa the best I can tell. Those leaves open up during the day then fold up like that during the night.
 
  • #494
The green leafed ones look like a form of penny-wort to me.
 
  • #495
I agree that it's some kind of Pennywort although one I've never seen. SE Asian species more than likely.
 
  • #496
Whoa, that tray of Drosera menziesii! Wonderful. The D. cistiflora are lovely and seeing them beside the tuberous 'dews explains to me why they grow poorly for me.
 
  • #497
Yeah Mark, the growing requirements for D.cistiflora are pretty much exactly the same as the tuberous species. Cool, wet winters and hot, dry summers.
 
  • #498
I'm coming to the conclusion that this is what D. hilaris would like as well. In Nepenthes terms, I mainly grow intermediate and these plants are closer to highland, at least during their growing season. It is nice to see it done right.
 
  • #499
I am in love with your D. menziesii. I stared at that photo wayyy too long. The red coloration in general that you are able to achieve on all your dews is gorgeous. Do you ever get spare tubers?
 
  • #500
Thanks. D.menziesii regularly produces tubers. The population of that pot just about doubles every year.
 
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