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Post by dom1234 on Sept 10, 2006 21:20:07 GMT -5
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Post by lloyd on Sept 10, 2006 22:59:02 GMT -5
Too bad about the sarracenia dying. Your plants otherwise look good. My filiformis (inside) is already going dormant and looks pretty sad compared to yours.
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Post by dom1234 on Oct 20, 2006 10:43:10 GMT -5
October 20: Lots of seeds, and all plants are ready for winter. We had our first 0 Celsius a few days ago (32F) Drosera filiformis: Drosera intermedia: Utricularia livida: Pinguicula grandifolia: Last survivor of Utricularia intermedia:
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Post by tom on Oct 20, 2006 12:49:40 GMT -5
Is it the same bog? I ask this because I thought you were supposed to move it... just being curious to know how they widthstanded the moving/transplantation shock...
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Post by Flytrap on Oct 20, 2006 14:10:25 GMT -5
Thanks for the great photos Dom. I can see you take great care of your bog garden... very little weeds As for the red spotting on your purpurea, I'm not sure what it is, but we get it too over here on the westcoast. And like yours, we lose one or two of these plants over our winters. Good luck, and I look forward to your spring photos.
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Post by mabudon on Oct 20, 2006 15:29:17 GMT -5
Yep, they're sleepin alright!! Nice lifecycle of pics you posted this season, Dom, and like Flytrap I am lookin forward to seeing what the next year brings. And I am shocked at how good your D.filiformis look, mine have been pretty much full-on asleep for weeks, maybe almost 2 months (and yes I'm sure they're still alive ) OH and tommy, look at the first pic on this page and the first pic in Doms 20th Octobre post- the rainbarrel in the first must have been on that stone in the second, if the bog got moved it wasn't by much, Dom must have won the appeals to the planning board
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Post by dom1234 on Oct 20, 2006 15:48:37 GMT -5
I'll move my peat bog this spring. It gonna be bigger and better. The surface will probably double, I'll remove the aquatic part (my father and me wants to put together my new peat bog and a little artificial lake). Half of it will be at full sun, the other half at shadow.
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Post by dom1234 on Oct 20, 2006 15:49:50 GMT -5
It will be moved at 15 km from where it is now.
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Post by dom1234 on Dec 8, 2006 22:00:31 GMT -5
1 December 2006: Nothing to say. The fifth December we received our first snow, and today (8 December) it's -12 Celsius (10F) outside. Brrrrr! Drosera filiformis : Pinguicula grandifolia:
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Post by vraev on Dec 8, 2006 22:31:10 GMT -5
nice pics. well....lol! nice pics showing how plants look in dormancy .....as if they are dead ..but they are infact sleeping....lol
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Post by tom on Dec 8, 2006 22:32:17 GMT -5
You got yourself a nice lot of P. grandiflora gemmae as i can see, wow!
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Post by lloyd on Dec 8, 2006 22:36:21 GMT -5
My S. leukophylla in the cold basement is looking pretty sad but that's dormancy, I guess.
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