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S.Purpurea is freaking out :(

Why is it making all these deformed pitchers!

xp4j69.jpg


Ignore the dormancy ones from last year.

Could it have something to do with a current fungus attack?
 
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In my experience, which for sarracenia needs to be taken with a grain of salt, the first few pitchers of the season are almost always a bit wonky, and aren't anything to be concerned over. I would advise to just wait, and see if they even out. If you're really concerned, you could try a preliminary treatment of Neem Oil, and see if that does anything.
 
Yeah, I have to agree and just wait and see what happens... my sarracenias make small pitchers from time to time especially in the beginning of the year.
 
A sudden change from one growing condition to another will cause the plant to freak out and not produce proper pitchers for a while. This may be from dormant to growing conditions, humidity changes, or lighting changes. Mine go through something like this every year, for about 2 months, then start growing more and more normal pitchers.
 
What am I looking at here?
 
All the random small pitchers.
 
If I understand what you are asking us to look at it looks like you're talking a whole separate growth point off of your mother plant. Nothing wrong with the plant, it's just growing.
 
oh alright.
I thought it was having some kind of negative response to something.
 
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Anyway, its put out this many pitchers since...
 
  • #10
This doesn't look good.

xp4j69.jpg
 
  • #11
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If these are new growth points, how do I separate them?
 
  • #12
Don't separate them. Leave them be; and if you really must, do it next spring before the plants awake from dormancy.
 
  • #14
It looks fine, I concur with the others who have mentioned environmental causes. If I get some time I'll shoot pics of the pitchers I have from the early season, our weird weather produced some really goofy growth.
 
  • #15
That's normal, it's just making new growth points. Leave them attached, as a dense clump of pitchers is an awesome sight.
 
  • #16
Plus with purpurea, the new points will stay close to each other, and are not easily separated. And yes, a massive clump is a sight to behold, especially when it gets a couple hundred pitchers!
 
  • #17
Plus with purpurea, the new points will stay close to each other, and are not easily separated. And yes, a massive clump is a sight to behold, especially when it gets a couple hundred pitchers!
That doesn't sound good at all D:
 
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