Aha! I knew it. Drosera capensis must spontaneously generate[b said:Quote[/b] (Capslock @ Nov. 11 2005,6:40)]Hey, ya beat me to it! I haven't got any seed yet, either, but here it is. It lives with a D. capensis that just appeared one day (on the right). I have lots of D. capensis, but have never purchased one. They just show up. Anyway, here's mine:
Capslock
If it is that dark, then it is probably D.capensis red.I Wish mine would have survived the contaminated lfs[b said:Quote[/b] (Capslock @ Nov. 11 2005,6:50)]Yeah they do! I have regular, alba, this one which is almost black (it is darker than it seems in the photo), and now they all produce seed. I just cut a stalk off this one, and I swear the room got dark for a few minutes from the cloud of seed that flew out. Sigh. I'm going to have billions of them all over.
EDIT: lol, not all drosera can be hybridized. Generally (very generally), the more similar they are, the better your chances. I doubt burmanii x binata would work at all. But who knows
Casplock
[b said:Quote[/b] ]D. capensis x D. burmanii
I'm not sure, but it looks more like the bottom one because the thingy is more fat and it is not long and skinny. I will try to post a pic of it if I can.[b said:Quote[/b] (Capslock @ Nov. 11 2005,7:01)]Which does it look like?:
Capslock