TerraForums Venus Flytrap, Nepenthes, Drosera and more talk
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short answer, yes. but i forget which species. i think D. rotundifolia is one. im pretty sure some in the teipu's of South America see snow. i know there are a coupple more species here in the states that see snow though
You could leave d. linearis outside in a Montana winter, and it would be none the worse for wear. A couple of Rocky Mountain bogs around Glacier National Park housed many rotundifolia, and some d. anglica as well. Winters there got wind chills as low as -65 below zero, and every late spring (around June) they would start growing, and put on a beautiful display. Hard winters are commonplace for some of these guys!
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