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PICTURES!!!

Hi,
heres some pics
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drosera burmannii (from Forbes)
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n. bicalcarata
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I got this from Tony on march 1st. Since I got it, it has grown the forming pitcher in the pic.
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b. liniflora from seed
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I recieved these as turions this month, the other plant is u. inflata ( in the background)  
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Matt
 
Very nice plants, droseadude.

Love the Heliamphora and N. Bicalcarata.
 
niiiiiice! did that drosera burmanii eat that rat? (inside joke)
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Beautiful! I especialy like theN.bicalcarata.
 
Nice plants!!!


Jerry
 
* looks at the pot with b. liniflora

AAAAAAAAAAAHHHHHHHH! spider spider spider!

*throws the pot on the ground snd squashes it. SPIDER!

Oh and the other plants are nice.

STOMP
 
Matt: I was given a packet of D. burmannii seeds a couple months ago and now I have a bazillion seedlings. How do you care for them? How big do they get? What is their life cycle like?
 
Very nice plants!! If you don't mind me asking, where do you grow them?? It looks like your heli. is growing in a greenhouse. Thanks,

-buckeye
 
  • #10
thanks alot everyone!!
Buckeye: Most of these plants are in a plastic crate with 2 compact flourescents (big bright ones) above it on clip on work lamps
Finch: I guess they do look like spiders!!

JimScott:I didn't grow them from seed, but they are pretty tolerant plants for me. Just treat them like a drosera capensis. moderate humidity, moderate light, warm temps. (high light is fine too)
Matt
 
  • #11
the h. minor pitcher might open tomorrow... I'll get a picture then.
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  • #12
Very nice looking plants you got there Matt.
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Good job. D. burmannii is one of my favorites.

Jim, D. burmanni is usually treated like an annual. They grow and mature pretty quickly and produce a lot of seed. After heavy flowering they often will begin to slump. You then start more plants with the seeds to keep them going. Some people keep them longer term. It may depend on the amount of flowering though. I have a pot bursting with 4-5 large plants and I will probably not let all of them flower to see if I can keep them longer. They put a lot of energy into making seed. Its like anything else, deadheading flowers lets the plant put energy back into the plant instead of making seed.

My 2 burmannii cents.
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  • #13
Thank you!
 
  • #14
more pics
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my tiny ceph
droseradude:
IMG_1778.JPG


coming out of dormancy
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'akai ryu' needs more light
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d. capensis alba
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new amp pitcher
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u. inflata
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who said utrics were beautiful? j/k  
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  • #15
*the last pic is u. inflata also. On the ceph, the only leaves I grew big noncarnivorous one and "most" of the developing pitcher. But I guess thats a lot since it doesn't have many leaves.
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  • #16
whats in that last pot? slime?
 
  • #18
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the last pic is u. inflata out of water on a stick!! auquatic bladderworts look like slime out of water. Ok, the h. minor trap opened.

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  • #19
ok, the pics weren't working for some reason. They're working now. (the new h. minor pic)
anyway, I got this succulent rock cactus thing yesterday, and today the flower opened.
IMG_1815.JPG
 
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