Venus fly trap starting to flower, any growers of this? need advice!

smokey de bear

Active Member
That is one fine Bucket-o-teeth you got there flowamasta and tree BTW +rep to you, I've heard these are difficult to grow if your not to sure what your doing. Most people I talk to tell me you gotta understand their natural environment to grow these properly, once you get where there from and why it's pretty damn simple. From what I heard most people do is keep their plants in a tray or bin with sitting water to simulate a bog, would be a neat plant to grow on some floating stuff with moss in an aquarium with fish in it. I didn't think being in water loged soil all the time was good for any plant but aquatic ones, always learning something new.
 

WeedKillsBrainCells

Well-Known Member
and the plant is not reacting to the gnats? is not trying to eat them?
from what ive read the plants have two stipules in the leaf/chomper. both of these stipules need to be touched at the same time for the trap to close, not just one. This seems to be a trait the plant has developed to save energy, because anything that is too small to touch both stipules at once (ie a gnat), probably wont provide the energy to cover the cost of closing itself + digesting

That is one fine Bucket-o-teeth you got there flowamasta and tree BTW +rep to you, I've heard these are difficult to grow if your not to sure what your doing. Most people I talk to tell me you gotta understand their natural environment to grow these properly, once you get where there from and why it's pretty damn simple. From what I heard most people do is keep their plants in a tray or bin with sitting water to simulate a bog, would be a neat plant to grow on some floating stuff with moss in an aquarium with fish in it. I didn't think being in water loged soil all the time was good for any plant but aquatic ones, always learning something new.
ive kept it in moss and soaked it but idk plant just defintely seems to be dying. it had 5 flowers and all shrivelled up fairly quickly. theyre all black tiny spots now, i dont know if they've self-pollinated, maybe have to wait and see on that?

i imagine a window sill in british winter time is not nearly enough light for anything, either that or it was a root issue. might re-transplant soon
 

flowamasta

Well-Known Member
I just picked up a baby flytrap at Lowes. When I saw it, I had to buy it. I think its the coolest plant Ive ever seen. It has 4 heads on it. Ive got it in the veg room under a t5. I would like to transplant it into a bigger pot. Ive read that transplanting can really shock them. Can anyone tell me how to do this safely? Any other tips for the care of a flytrap beside the generic info Im finding online would be cool too! Thanks!
like anything, there will be some shock to the plant, its all just how delicate u hold the main plant when you remove the roots!!, a funny thing this morning, when i went to check my outdoory, in one of the large venus flytrap heads, i could see clearly through one of the traps cause of the sun, and i could see a spider trapped inside, and it was trying soo hard to get out, actually managed to get a couple of legs on the outside, as i watched it for about 5 minutes, it eventually squeezed the life out of the spider, it closed almost flat on it until it could no longer move, amazing stuff i rekon. one less spider i have to worry about on my plant!
hate cobwebs and shit
 
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