TerraForums Venus Flytrap, Nepenthes, Drosera and more talk
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My N. ramispina was doing great. Now it is winter time I brought them inside. Now it's dying. Why so quickly. They are high land witch like cold nights. In Jacksonville in the night are hot in the summer. it's cooler in the house.
In my experience, ramispina is very tough, so it must be shock or some big factor like that. Maybe it is not getting enough light inside. Maybe it has been hit with flyspray, it could be a number of things.
Low humidity, even a drop from constant high humidity wouldn't kill ramispina, it would just cause the leaves to wilt. Root rot, on the other hand, would be fatal. Is the plant sitting in saucers of water which are constantly full?
I keep my ramispina outdoors yearround here in So. Calif. It's gotten into the upper 30's and ramispina does fine. I recently got a smaller ramispina and potted it up and put it outdoors under shade cloth. The leaves wilted and it stressed for 2 days. Then it rebounded and looks great. Ramispina is a pretty tough plant. Can you leave it outdoors through winter where you live? If not, find a sunny windowsill for the really cold nights.
Quote[/b] (SydneyNeps @ Dec. 04 2005,3:27)]Low humidity, even a drop from constant high humidity wouldn't kill ramispina, it would just cause the leaves to wilt. Root rot, on the other hand, would be fatal. Is the plant sitting in saucers of water which are constantly full?
All mt Nep are hanging with no trays under them. All my Neps stop picturing when I bring them in. Only ramispina started dying. They are getting sun light in the room I keep them in.
How much sunlight? Most plants don't get nearly as much light when kept indoors even when next to a window, and far less if kept a distance from windows. Good lighting is one of the requirements for pitcher production.
Are you heating your home? If not, I doubt humidity would be much of an issue since humidity indoors should be near what it is outdoors (where the plants were pitchering). Too bad your plants are on hangers; otherwise, you could place them on moist pebble trays to increase local humidity (to rule-out humidity as a factor).
Alternatively, they just may be adjusting to the new conditions in your home. Neps sometimes stop pitchering when moved to new conditions (and may lose a few existing leaves or pitchers in the process).
It's not that they need to adjust to the indoors. I kept them in side when I first bought them for two months. Not one new picture the whole time. When I put them out side(because I was running out of room) they exploded with pictures and new growth. I want to put them back out side. But, if we have a hard freeze, it is a nightmare to move them.
This is what they look like now.
This is how I had to hang them out side.
Notice how tangled in the shelf they are. That think is heavy. It takes a couple of people to help me move it. People who are not always available.
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