Showing posts with label Drosera venusta. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Drosera venusta. Show all posts

Saturday, November 28, 2015

What's blooming in winter?

It's not officially winter yet, but we've gotten the first real chill in California this last week. Let's see what's blooming in spite of the – relative – cold (it's still California, after all).

Pinguicula emarginata and Pinguicula lusitanica are both putting up blooms.

Pinguicula emarginata with bud.
The venation in this flower is even visible before it opens.
Pinguicula lusitanica with bud.
There you go little guy!
P. emarginata is extremely floriferous, and it's got wonderful flowers. I like having it in my collection! The P. lusitanica is a very healthy specimen I got from Josh, and I'm hoping it'll set seed with this bloom, rather than just dying like my last one did.

The alien and adorable Utricularia pubescens has a solitary bloom right now.

Utricularia pubescens.
Funny little flower.
Unfortunately the sporangia outnumber the flower stalks in this pot. Fortunately, the U. pubescens flowers are cool as heck.

My Byblis liniflora keeps making new blooms, but I've yet to collect any seed from it.

Byblis liniflora.
B. liniflora is so delicate-looking.
For whatever reason these guys just aren't making any fruit/seeds. It's still a great plant, but I need to get seed before it dies off. Oh well, I can enjoy it for now at least!

There are a couple other plants blooming right now that I've yet to get seed from: Drosera venusta and Drosera madagascariensis.

D. spiralis with D. venusta flower stalk.
This flower stalk is much too long.
Drosera madagascariensis flower stalk.
Good luck little guy.
That D. venusta stalk is super long and dangly. As you can see, it's insinuated itself among the Drosera spiralis. There might be some seed setting in the spent buds, but I can't tell. The D. madagascariensis might have a better shot this time around, since it's in full scramble, and will be able to support itself on the media once the stalk gets too long. We'll see.

One plant that I'm betting on heavily for seed is this Drosera capensis red form. It's gotten several significant feedings, and it's rewarding me with a fat crop of buds.

Drosera capensis red for flower stalk.
A lot more to come here.
Josh has said that this form of D. capensis is the only one that occasionally fails to set seed for him, but I think that this flower stalk at least is chugging away – I'm pretty sure there's some seed swelling in the oldest buds. The tough thing will be to avoid bumping it while it finishes blooming out.

Drosera aliciae and Drosera anglica CA × HI are both blooming for the first time in a while, and I'm excited to get some seed from them.

Drosera aliciae with flower stalk.
Haven't seen this one in a while!
Drosera anglica CA × HI.
I need to do something about this corner.
The D. aliciae that live in the community pot always seem to struggle with humic acid buildup, which makes their growth stall, but I'm not sure what to do about it. Eventually it clears up and growth starts again. I should feed this guy to get a nice crop of seed. The D. anglica is sitting over in the former quarantine tray, and is bending towards the light (the bulbs should be replaced soon).

Finally, there's a flower open on some Drosera omissa.

Drosera omissa with flower.
If you're not growing pygmies yet you should start this season.
As you can see, this species is a very enthusiastic bloomer. It's funny, I've only gotten a few species of pygmies to flower. D. omissa flowers the most readily, and I've also gotten blooms on D. leucostigma, D. allantostigma, and D. helodes. However, I've never flowered D. scorpioides, or D. pulchella, or any of the other species that are otherwise doing so well. It's curious.

The gemmae are ripening though :-D

Friday, May 29, 2015

Field Trip Part 2: Dews and Pings at Predatory Plants

A couple days ago we checked out the Nepenthes at the San Francisco greenhouse of Josh Brown, owner of Predatory Plants. Today we're gonna look some of his other plants, particularly Drosera and Pinguicula. The first thing I noticed when I walked into the work area of the greenhouse, though, were these Sarracenia benches. I laughed when I saw them, because Josh is vocal in his dislike of Sarracenia (he claims he can't grow them well).

Sarracenia at Predatory Plants.
Babies on the left, monsters on the right!
Those look pretty decent to me! Josh does a lot of sarrs from seed (which you can see on the left), including some in-house crosses. On the right there are specimen-sized plants that he grows for flowers, or for large divisions which can be sold on eBay or what have you.

In his heart though, Josh is a Nepenthes and Drosera man. This is his "sundew ark" – the parent stock of (almost) all of the sundews he has in production, and what is pretty much his personal collection.

Various sundews at Predatory Plants.
It was cute seeing these parent plants all hanging out together.
He apologized that these plants weren't all looking great, since a number of them had flowered and shrunk back a bit. Still, some of them look great, especially (to my mind) the Drosera sp. Floating (which is a form of Drosera admirabilis) on the bottom left.

Next up is the production area, where he grows out all the dews he sells online and in-person.

Drosera aliciae, Drosera natalensis, Drosera coccicaulis (i.e. Drosera venusta), and Drosera "Chimanimani Mountains" at Predatory Plants.
In this tray, from top: Drosera aliciae, Drosera coccicaulis (now usually considered synonymous with Drosera venusta), Drosera natalensis, Drosera "Chimanimani Mountains",

Albino Drosera venusta at Predatory Plants.
Albino-colored Drosera venusta. Super cool!
Drosera tracyi at Predatory plants.
Big old tangle of Drosera tracyi.
Josh has an interesting shipping method. He calls it "bare root," but it's significantly less disruptive than typical barerooting. He pops the plant – including the plug of media – out of its tray, wraps the plug up to keep it in place, and then ships it along with an appropriately-sized pot. The purchaser can then just pop it in the pot and Bob's your uncle. Pretty cool!

I thought this tray of Pinguicula lusitanica was cool, and Josh was pretty casually like, "Yeah, I don't know why I have those really, I never sell any."

Pinguicula lusitanica at Predatory plants.
Look at all those plugs so neat and full of pings.
I fully intend to lighten him of some of these plants. He meant to give me a pot, but I forgot. My own plants bloomed, failed to set seed, and died.

One of the interesting things about the plant trade is which plants get maintained in production, and which do not. These next two are a perfect example. First up is the absolutely unstoppable pygmy sundew hybrid, Drosera omissa × pulchella.

Drosera omissa × pulchella at Predatory Plants.
What a hilarious mound of plants.
Josh actually lost a bunch of his pygmies this year because he never got around to harvesting and re-sowing gemmae, so when the eventual round of die-offs happened there were no contingencies. I didn't get a picture of it, but he had several trays of pygmy skeletons. It was sad. Except for these guys, which will probably never die. Look at those crazy clumps. Hybrids often have extra vigor, and D. omissa × pulchella is crazy. There's a reason that any place that sells pygmies always has loads of this hybrid.

The counter to this fecundity is the rather lovely Pinguicula planifolia.

Pinguicula planifolia at Predatory Plants.
It's a shape these are so hard to propagate, I think they look awesome.
Most of the more familiar pings propagate very easily though leaf pulls (all the Mexican species, like Pinguicula gigantea or Pinguicula moranensis) or by buds at the leaf tips (Pinguicula primuliflora) or in rare cases, by self-pollination (P. lusitanica). This species – according to Josh – can only be propagated by crossing two different clones and sowing seed. He got this one batch of ~100 plants by crossing two plants a couple years ago, which eventually died. He's been growing these out ever since, and they've never bloomed. So while they're really lovely, don't expect to see many for sale any time soon. Alas.

It was great fun checking out the greenhouse. Always cool to see how someone else solves the problems of growing our favorite weirdo plants!

P.S. Maria let me know in the comments of Wednesday's post that there is in fact a Predatory Plants Instagram. Good to know.

Wednesday, May 20, 2015

Plant Profile: Drosera venusta

This is part of a series of posts describing my experiences with different species, their culture requirements, and photos of their growth in my collection. The full series can be read here, or by species at the Series page

At the end of yesterday's post I shared the following picture of Drosera venusta, which inspired me to do a Plant Profile of this species. It's one of the prettiest plants in my collection.

Drosera venusta.
D. venusta, 5-19-2015.
D. venusta is a South African sundew that is closely related to – some say synonymous with – Drosera natalensis. I'm totally unqualified to take a position on this issue. In any case, I got my D. venusta from California Carnivores back in June 2014.

Drosera venusta.
D. venusta, 7-22-2014.
It was beautiful and lovely and everything for a month or two, but then there was a period of several months where it declined hard and looked very ratty.

Drosera venusta.
D. venusta, 9-2-2014.
I've heard from some people that D. venusta will just occasionally look terrible, or even die back, but then bounce back for no apparent reason. In my case though I think it was high temperatures that sort of fried the plant.

While the main plant was looking terrible I had some good success propagating with leaf cuttings. I started leaf cuttings from several species, including D. venusta, in July. It struck after about 5 weeks, and then developed quite well in the next few months.

Drosera venusta leaf cutting.
D. venusta leaf cutting, 8-15-2014.
Drosera venusta plantlets from leaf cuttings.
D. venusta plantlets from leaf cuttings, 12-22-2014.
I traded the babies away around this time, and luckily my main plant was starting to bounce back.

Drosera venusta.
D. venusta, 11-24-2014.
I really think it was the cooler weather that made the difference. I've since moved my collection into the garage, which stays cooler all year than the house. We'll see if that keeps the plant looking good throughout the summer.

One thing to note with this species: the first time I got it to flower all the way I didn't get any seed. The next time it flowered I basically ignored the blooms, but it looked like it spilled some seed onto my lights. I'll have to keep an eye on it next time to harvest seed properly. In the mean time I can just admire the heck out of this plant.

Drosera venusta.
D. venusta, 2-9-2015.


The Breakdown
  • media: Standard peat:sand carnivore mix.
  • light: As much as you can possibly provide.
  • water: I haven't noticed any particular sensitivity to water levels. My tray goes dry periodically and the plant doesn't care. Keep it wet over all though.
  • temperature: Seems to be sensitive to temperatures much in excess of 80-90 F (25-30 C).
  • feeding: D. venusta really responds well to feeding. It will get somewhat redder without being fed, but not dramatically.
  • propagation: Pretty easy to start from leaf cuttings. No experience from seed or root cuttings or anything.

Tuesday, May 19, 2015

The fruits of the BACPS spring meeting

Back on the 9th we held the BACPS Spring meeting down in Palo Alto. I was pinch-hitting as secretary and also helping run the thing, so I didn't have much time for photos. However, I did have time to acquire some new plants.

First up is this Pinguicula sp. Tehuacán which was sent down from California Carnivores especially for me, since Daniela knows how I'm always keeping my eyes peeled for new pings.

Pinguicula sp. Tehuacán.
Cute little guy.
It's all succulent right now, so I'm looking forward to seeing some carnivorous leaves.

I also picked up a new pygmy from Damon. He literally just said "Do you have Drosera mannii? It's got nice big flowers," and I just handed him some money immediately.

Drosera mannii, a pygmy sundew.
I'm a total sucker for pygmies.
I'm nothing if not reliable with regards to my pygmy habit. Damon also told me that Drosera lasiantha is a slow and finicky grower for everyone, which made me feel better about how little mine has grown since I got it in January.

An unexpected bonus came from a fellow from San Jose who was selling a few plants, including this Stylidium debile.

Stylidium debile.
Can't wait to see some cool flowers on this guy!
He also had a Drosera regia that almost tempted me, but I'm taking a month or so off work right now so I decided to stay prudent and not buy it. The S. debile is cool though! I think it's been decided that Stylidium is not carnivorous, but it grows in similar conditions to bog carnivores, and has very interesting flowers that snap together to ensure pollination. I'll post about it if I get blooms!

I also got a couple of plants (that I did not need) from the raffle – a young Sarracenia flava var. rubricorpora and a small Nepenthes ventricosa.

Sarracenia flava var. rubricorpora.
Already showing good color.
Nepenthes ventricosa.
I know I won't be able to resist the Nepenthes forever.
Of course, the question of need is a thorny one when it comes to new plants. It looks like the nep is gonna need to adjust a bit to my conditions. That'll be fine though – it should be a pretty easy grower.

The last plant I got on that (a day when I wasn't planning on getting many plants) is this Pinguicula emarginata I bought from Drew Martinez.

Pinguicula emarginata.
I'll post a picture of that flower once it pops.
Drew invited people back to his house to see his collection and buy pieces of it after the meeting, since he's moving to Texas soon. I'll need to do a post about his backyard soon.

Finally, I just want to post my Drosera venusta because damn it's been looking good lately.

Drosera venusta.
This is one of my favorite species, absolutely.
What a beaut!

Saturday, March 7, 2015

Sundews Etc. one year in

One year ago today I made my first post here on the blog, about my blooming Drosera capillaris.

Drosera capillaris.
D. capillaris, 3-7-2014, from Flowers and D. capillaris "Alabama".
Things were so much simpler back then.

Here are some Fun Facts about the Sundews Etc. blog:
  • Around 17% of my traffic comes from Ukraine. Thanks for tuning in, Ukrainian growers!
  • Both of my Grower Interviews are among my top 10 most popular posts. I guess I should do some more.
  • Based on the labels (to the right) I talk about Drosera burmannii more than any other species (big surprise), but pygmy sundews as a group are a close second.
  • There are just shy of 1100 photos of carnivorous plants on this blog for 153 posts, around 7 per post on average.
Now, let's look back at some old posts and see how far we've come.

March

Dionaea muscipula.
Dionaea muscipula, 3-12-2014, from Things are growing!
April 

Drosera scorpioides
Drosera scorpioides, 4-3-2014, from Pygmies and D. adelae.
May

Drosera 'Marston Dragon'
Drosera 'Marston Dragon', 5-26-2014, from The Housefly and the Dragon.
June

Drosera allantostigma.
Drosera allantostigma, 6-20-2014, from I really love Drosera allantostigma.
July

Drosera capensis 'Albino'
Drosera capensis 'Albino', 7-4-2014, from Repotting a few sundews.
August

Drosera helodes and Drosera allantostigma.
Drosera helodes and Drosera allantostigma, 8-26-2014, from Checking in on various plants.
September

Drosera adelae
Drosera adelae. 9-11-2014, from Drosera adelae is offset crazy.
October

Sarracenia leucophylla
Praying mantis and Sarracenia leucophylla, 10-25-2014, from A thief among the Sarracenia.
November

Pinguicula laueana × emarginata
Pinguicula laueana × emarginata. 11-21-2014, from Pinguicula roundup, November 2014.
December

Utricularia calycifida.
Utricularia calycifida flower, 12-6-2014, from A few new blooms.
January

Drosera ultramafica × spatulata
Drosera ultramafica × spatulata, 1-27-2015, from Some progress shots.
February

Drosera venusta
Drosera venusta, 2-9-2015, from Random pictures of pretty sundews.

Finally, here are a few more posts I noticed looking through the archives that might be of interest to newer reader.
And of course, there are Plant Profiles, Cultivation Guides, and Grower Interviews on my Blog Series page.

Thank you all for reading – sharing pictures and talking about my plants with fellow growers makes everything a lot more fun. Here's to another good year!

Monday, February 9, 2015

Random pictures of pretty sundews

I've been talking a lot about stuff that's not from genus Drosera lately. It's time to get back down to brass tacks. Look at this Drosera venusta. Just look at it.

Drosera venusta.
If you look closely, you can see that D. venusta has snap tentacles. Interesting!
This is easily, easily the best this plant has ever looked for me. Much better than it looked back in September. Maybe it's the cooler temperatures that have this plant looking better, or maybe it's just finally acclimated to my conditions. Or maybe it's random. I've heard from some other growers that it just looks great or looks terrible randomly. At least it's looking great now!

Another plant that's been doing pretty well is Drosera madagascariensis. It's mostly recovered from blooming.

Drosera madagascariensis.
Got that lean on.
I didn't get any seed the last time it bloomed, so I've been clipping the flower stalks. I think I'll have to do a stem cutting soon, since there's a serious wiggle on the largest plant. I'll also probably start some more leaf cuttings.

I've also got a couple of Drosera hamiltonii that are in one of their "looking good" phases.

Drosera hamiltonii.
Very lovely colors on this plant.
Drosera hamiltonii.
A different clone.
This species is sort of weird in my conditions. When I feed them they'll lose their dew for like 6 weeks, and then they dew up again and look great, which temps me into feeding them again. I think they might like a taller pot and an airier mix, but I don't know when I'll get around to repotting them again. Ah well, it's not so bad.

Finally, things are progressing well on Operation: Nice-looking Drosera sessilifolia.

Drosera sessilifolia.
Lovely glow on this sundew.
Moving right along!