nepenthes outdoors
nepenthes outdoors
i grow a few highland nepenthes in my terrariums but ive heard some species are tough enough to plant in baskets outside in summer. does anyone do this? and if so which species? thanks
Re: nepenthes outdoors
Not confident enough yet to buy them yet, but wouldn't mind growing them from seed.
Re: nepenthes outdoors
ive grown a few from seed but they are very hit and miss. some of them take a few years to get to a decent size but in my terrariums the older ones grow like mad.
Re: nepenthes outdoors
You'd be better to buy one, they take seven years from seed.fern Rob wrote:Not confident enough yet to buy them yet, but wouldn't mind growing them from seed.
Had a few, killed most of them.
The current specimen survives on my kitchen windowsill, grows leaves, sometimes pitchers start to form but never mature.
Re: nepenthes outdoors
but them from GCs' and specialist nurseries as plants as they are relatively slow growing, fine outdoors in summer but take in before it STARTS to get cold as they would not like any cold at all. Over winter they like to be on the drier side and prefer rainwater. They also don't have any pitchers in the winter so don't get worried .
In summer keep very moist and spray with a mister to keep humid. Plant out in late spring/ early summer
quite easy too get hold of and you are looking for highland type nepenthes that are more cool tolerant than the lowland species. keep a temperatures between 10c-15c higher would be ok but a bit uncomfortable for the plant but lower would make the plant go into dormancy.
In summer keep very moist and spray with a mister to keep humid. Plant out in late spring/ early summer
quite easy too get hold of and you are looking for highland type nepenthes that are more cool tolerant than the lowland species. keep a temperatures between 10c-15c higher would be ok but a bit uncomfortable for the plant but lower would make the plant go into dormancy.
Re: nepenthes outdoors
I shall wait until I go to a garden show next year.Steph wrote:You'd be better to buy one, they take seven years from seed.fern Rob wrote:Not confident enough yet to buy them yet, but wouldn't mind growing them from seed.
Had a few, killed most of them.
The current specimen survives on my kitchen windowsill, grows leaves, sometimes pitchers start to form but never mature.
Re: nepenthes outdoors
nepenthes dont have a dormancy period as most are from indonesia. my highland tanks go down to 8C at night but the humidity stays high so they have trap production year roundcall wrote:keep a temperatures between 10c-15c higher would be ok but a bit uncomfortable for the plant but lower would make the plant go into dormancy.