Well..in theory there is one simple way to adapt a VFT to growing year-round and not require a dormancy..it happens all the time in nature..millions of species of plants have adapted to no dormancy!
All you do is build an artificial bog in South Carolina..stock it with VFTs..
then, very gradually, over the course of a few million years, slowly move it south toward the equator..
an inch a year should do it..
that would probably work! (seriously..not being sarcastic)
but other than that..no, it wont work..
Scot
p.s.
I worked out the actual distance!
South Carolina to the equator is about 3,500 miles..
thats 22,176,000 inches. (22 billion)
lets say you would need 2 million years to actually adapt a plant to a new climate..
(I doubt one million would be long enough)
doing the math..thats 9 inches a year..(assuming my math is right!)
you would need to move the plants 9 inches a year southward to reach the equator in 2 million years.
thats only a little faster than Continental drift, and Continental drift alone is responsible for creating all kinds of new species,
and adapting existing species to new climates..so yeah, it would totally work.
you might have a new species of VFT by the time you get there!
but that could be interesting..
Scot