RE: Darlingtonia Compost etc.

Ken Cusson (ccskenc@redshift.com)
Thu, 30 May 1996 07:32:00 -0700

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Sent: Thursday, May 30, 1996 5:46 AM
To: Multiple recipients of list

Hi Toby, my $0.02 worth.

It seems to me that Darlingtonias will grow in any lime and =
nutrient-free
substrate that is open and free-draining. However, the incorporation of
some or all live sphagnum does seem to be worthwhile as this seems to
be a common factor with the best specimens I have seen. The biggest
problem with growing Darlingtonias is keeping the roots cool - mine
live outdoors all the time here in the UK; I have tried growing them
indoors but they generally give up the ghost after a couple of years.

I keep my Darlingtonia growing in a water lily-type basket and in a =
larger bucket of water (much like a mini pool). They seem to really love =
it. They are approx. 3-yrs. old and I have a number of new plants =
popping up around the others from the stolons. They are also outside all =
the time - we live in No. Calif., USA - temps: day =3D @65-90 F. and =
night =3D @42-60 F.

I tried various combinations of peat and coarse sand when I started
growing pygmies, and never really achieved anything satisfactory, =
bearing
in mind that some pygmies don't go dormant in UK summers. I had a
ready supply of grit from mixing my own cactus compost, which shares
the requirements of openness and free-drainingness (50% cheapo peat
based potting compost, 50% grit, and a handful of BSE-ridden =
carcinogenic
bonemeal if anyone wants to know. And yes, I know some otherwise sane,
rational, intelligent people who really believe there are at least 2 =
"good"
Mammillaria species for every letter of the alphabet). I decided to
experiment with a 50% peat/50% grit mix for my CPs, and in general it
seems ok. I now have most terrestrial CPs growing in it, although I am
continuing to experiment. I don't grow Nepenthes so I don't know how
they would fare, but Cephalotus seems to like it.

I also grow my pygmies in the same compost as most of my other CP. It is =
1 part peat, a part perlite and 1 part horticultural sand. They are =
flowering like mad and I had gemmae this past winter winding up =
everywhere!

My large Darlingtonia was obviously cramped - it produced lots of =
flowers
but smaller pitchers than previously, so I split it this spring. One of =
the
large chunks I kept is in a spacious bucket - it is doing well for new
pitchers but the flowers seem to have 'stopped'. Other chunks that I =
have
crammed into pots that look immediately cramped are not doing well for
new pitchers but the flower stalks are rocketing up. Do Darlingtonias
flower better when their root systems are cramped?

Has anyone tried foliar feeding of pygmies with Miracid, or with any
'fertiliser' that doesn't jump or crawl?

I use 25% strength Miracid on all my plants, except a few of the =
Drosera. The pygmies, however, seem to like it - no negative reactions =
at all.

Good Growing, NigelH=20

Hope these comments help - Ken C.
=20