TerraForums Venus Flytrap, Nepenthes, Drosera and more talk
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Im gettin a nepenthes inermis soon and im getting it from wistuba, who says it is an easy one to grow. I just need some instructions on how to Grow the bugger!
It's a highland so keep it cool at night 60-65F and humidity high 60-80% and plant in Sphagnum in my opinion . Also this palnt should be easy for you just be gentle with it as if it's coming from overseas to will be quite tramatized. But treat it as a true highland and what size will it be? 3-5 inches? If so palnt it in a 6-8 inch pot to start it off.
4 inch pots should be fine. N. inermis Andreas shipped two months ago (to me ) had an diameter of about 6-8cm / 2.5-3 inch. I hope you plan to grow them inside a terrarium. On a windowsill you'll kill them in very few days as they aren't hardened of for this and I do suspect this could be done successfully for N. inermis.
Standard Nepenthes soil mix should be fine for N. inermis. Even only after two months I would say they do grow much faster than most other highland species.
I was thinking how much I like the Inermis pitchers but the only ones I've seen are uppers, whats a baby inermis pitcher look like? Anyone got a photo of theirs they could put up?
Virus, yeah you can, most any other highland can be Ultrahighlands! I am goign to try N.inermis that way someday. Anyone else care to vioce thier thgouhts on Inermis as an Ultrahighland?
Timbudtwo, message me on the dist. I would be interested in it.
Swords ask Tony about an Inermis picture. He has some Inermis at his G-house, and to think I got to see it in person.
but yeah he should have a picture of it, probably will post it up for you.
Martin had posted a picture of his that looked only slightly larger than mine and the pitchers were starting to flare open more. I am suspecting that they will go into upper pitcher mode at a fairly young age.
Tony
i was planning on giving it high humidity then slowly lowering it down to waht i grow my ventrosicas at. My room has a pretty good humidity in the first place so i dont think i should have a problem.
Although a true highland plant, this species is fairly easy, and will endure daytime highs
up to 30 C, with overnight lows of 17 C. However, I suspect that it is more comfortable
in a range of 25 to 10 C. It is fairly vigorous, and produces a number of basal shoots when
vines get long. I have not found it easy to root cuttings however; all attempts so far have
failed. It may be a good candidate for airlayering.
Air layering is taking a long Nepenthes vine, notching it and covering the notch with spahgnum moss usually. Plantlets should sprout fomr the nothced area.
Regarding airlayering, in the case of Nepenthes, "plantlets" do not
sprout from the cut area. Rather, roots eventually appear at this location, and
the segment of vine with new roots may then be cut free and planted on its own.
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