Dude, that's a lot of cephs. Did you get most of them recently?
Man I am envious of all your cephs.. They all look great!
no one should have that many cephs lol
Truncata is growing like a champ. Can't wait to see it fully formed.
Oh you have sumatrana seedlings. That's a plant I'd love to have. The pitchers are so big and fat. Very cool you sprouted some.
Interesting... I've never seen U. nelumbifolia or reniformis grown in such a peaty, dense mix.
That viscarla is looking great though.

It's actually really chunky under the surface. A lot of orchid bark, charcoal, and what have you..

I believe Bob recommended, but we all know how my memory is:
U. nelumbifolia ~ boggy sand & peat, just like I have it.
U. reniformis ~ fluffy live LFS type dilly.
I didn't know their preferred media at first when I stuck them into this mini bog. But by the time I had a direction on their growing conditions, they had already broken the surface with new growth. So I said screw it and left em'. They seem happy enough..![]()
U. nelumbifolia dwells in bromeliads as does U. humboldtii (but not exclusively). U. reniformis supposedly rarely lives there but somehow that 'rumor' has spread & won't die. I tried to find the Fernando semi-rant about this on CPUK but gave up when I located this thread, which has both fantastic pics & a statement about where U. reniformis is usually found (2nd post).I believe both those species live in bromeliads in situ- quite a different substrate.
U. nelumbifolia dwells in bromeliads as does U. humboldtii (but not exclusively). U. reniformis supposedly rarely lives there but somehow that 'rumor' has spread & won't die. I tried to find the Fernando semi-rant about this on CPUK but gave up when I located this thread, which has both fantastic pics & a statement about where U. reniformis is usually found (2nd post).
I'll send you the Charles Ceph today Mass.

