I may try a N. hamata next year, but probably won't have results as good as your plants!
As I mentioned earlier in the thread, for whatever reason, these plants were not difficult at all. In fact, if everyone's experiences were like mine, I would consider them beginner plants. One of them grew very well in my office terrarium - all seasons (& started with no roots at all). N. jamban & N. aristolochioides have been much more idiosyncratic in their demands - both N. hamata just keep growing through all temps and levels of abuse ...Wow, looking fantastic. I've never tried, but it is my understanding N. hamata can be pretty difficult.
6-7" to the top of the mouth (for most) - add another 1-1.5" to top of lid.Woah.....how big are the pitchers on that thing?!?
Typically everything is in a pot. For years, I've put a bed of live LFS in the bottom of each tank - it maintains a healthy level of humidity and acts like a visual hygrometer - letting me know when the air is too dry. I do allow a few non-aggressive plants to inhabit the LFS however. D. prolifera grows better for me as a feral plant than in any pot. In the larger (75 gal) utric tank I set up this summer, their pads are close to a nickel (& imo - look very cool - & happy). A U. humboldtii has also sent an aerial stolon down to establish a beachhead in the LFS - I'm still debating whether I might allow it .... In my office tank, I've also allowed some red D. filiformis to grow in the LFS.I love those community tanks - are they separate pots of plants with moss all grown in inbetween, or just a big pile of sphag around the N. hamata with various cute dews popping up?