I remember when I had my leucphylla's (or however you spell that) someone told me that in my area that I should leave them outside year around. And it snows about 3-10 times during the winter were the temps range from 20's-40 usualy.
But I didn't do what he said ( and my plants are dead
)
This is the conersation that we had (note that this was probally some tme in november/december:
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Quote </td></tr><tr><td id="QUOTE"> HIM: What part of the country do you live in? Has your plant been outside all this year previous to now?
ME: I live in the upper part of middle Tennessee. Yes it stayed outside up until a couple weaks ago when I got afraid that it die from the cold temperatures.
HIM: Most of the time what will kill a Sarracenia isn't the cold itself, but dehydration. Harsh dry cold will suck water right out of the roots. If your plant is well covered with something like black plastic or fabric it will easily survive short cold spells into the lower 20's. If you've brought your plant in, it should be someplace like an unheated garage or shed. It shouldn't be warm. If your plant is in a warm place it will break dormancy and very likely die from rot. A fungicide spray like sulfur works well to prevent mold if the plant is in a dark place.
HIM: I checked your current forecast. You're not having cold weather right now. Only when the temps are going into the teens for extended periods do you need to worry. If it's getting into the 40's each day, just leave it outside. Make sure it stays standing in some water.
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I'd imagine it would depend on the plant though.
Don't know it this helps or not.
-warped