[Sarracenia ‘Alucard’ and future meal, livin’ on the edge…]
I don’t really got to say much here, but man… that fly really is livin’ on the edge (not for long though…)
[Sarracenia ‘Alucard’ and future meal, livin’ on the edge…]
I don’t really got to say much here, but man… that fly really is livin’ on the edge (not for long though…)
Posted in Blog
Tagged Addiction, Alucard, Carnivorous Plant, Garden, North American Pitcher Plant, Obsession, Pitcher Plant, Sarracenia, Sarracenia Hybrid
Maaaarrrtty!! So I jumped into my Delorean and went back to 1986. What an awesome year. Seriously. I mean, Top Gun, Crocodile Dundee, Ferris Bueller’s Day off! And who can forget… Death Trap!
“Death Trap” you say?
Dude, yeah! Remember!? Nature?! Season 4, Episode 14! March 23, 1986!?!
NINTEEN FREEKIN EIGHTY SIX!!!
What?! You don’t remember?!
Ahh well, let me dust off the *VHS TAPE*… Heh!
So I found this tape while doing some home office cleaning. It was given to me by a friend of mine who found it at a garage sale for like… a dollar or something and gave it to me as a present since they knew I grew carnivores. I managed to find this totally rad VHS. Can’t wait to watch this again! Movie night, my house?! Just remember to bring the parachute pants, leg warmers, mullets, and the crimped hair waves. … SYKE!!! 🙂

Posted in Blog
Tagged 80s, axel f, death trap, ferris buellers day off, nature, rad, Sarracenia, vcr, vhs
… use Orthene. Seriously.

[Mosaic – Top Left: Orthene in a sealed ceramic container and my Flow Master | Top Right: The smelly stuff. Bottom left: PUMP IT UP! | Bottom Right: Sucky things, beware!]
I’m just like any other gardener out there that has their struggles with things that SUCK. You know aphids, mealy bugs, scale… things that suck. I try not to use too many chemicals in the garden, but at times, I just have to give into it.
So back to Orthene – It smells nasty but it works. It is a systemic pesticide that the plant absorbs into the leaves, so rain can’t stop the effectiveness. When directions are followed, it is low in toxicity for people, pets, birds, fish, elephants, giraffes, elk, hippopotamoooooses, tigers, lions, dodo birds, tigers, lions, and tigers. (However, it’s toxic to bees when they come into direct exposure to it, so keep that in mind if you have a bee farm thing going on.) It’s also biodegradable so it won’t build up in the soil. As far as applying it, as with any chemical you use, make sure you have adequate air circulation. If I spray in the greenhouse, all vents are open, and I spray in the morning or evening to avoid a hot house of vapors.
I find it’s a great way to control pest-suckyness in the garden. I keep the Orthene can that is sealed away in yet another ceramic container to contain the smell. I typically use it in the spring after divisions just as a preventative measure just before new growth starts. I will then again use the stuff maybe 2 or 3 months down the road , and then later again in the late summer of fall. I haven’t had any major break outs of any sucky pests since I try to address the situation by 1.) prevention and 2.) action when I do see stuff startin’ up.
And no, I can’t use ladybugs to control aphids, cuz, well… ladybugs just end up getting eaten by my garden. Really. They do. Neem oil seems to work for other growers, but for some reason I had it burn some leaves. I’ll give Neem another shot down the road probably.
The reason I am bringing this Orthene thing up is because I haven’t really sprayed much this year. So far only once up to this point. When I was sorting my seedlings out, I noticed some aphids on the seedlings. Aphids SUCK. Deformed pitchers and crud like that. Before it could get any worse, I decided to spray recently (photographed in the 4 piece mosaic above.) I use about 1 teaspoon per gallon of water. That’s what my flow master thing is for. It’s a 2 gallon flow master photographed above.
I mix 2 gallons of water and roughly two loose teaspoons of Orthene, pump it up and then go spray. I hit up the leaves with the stuff, but where I concentrate the spray is deep down where the rhizome and new growth is at, as that is the place where most sucky pests like to hide out for some reason, attacking the new growth, hiding in the areas where the pitcher attaches to the rhizome.
So, that’s how I deal with my sucky problems; hope it helps! Would love to hear how you deal with your sucky problems too! 🙂
Hello out there y’all. I took a few days off and was out of town in beautiful Lake Tahoe for a few days. It was nice to get away from the office for once and just enjoy air and light. And trees. And lake.
Just wanted to share what happened today in the greenhouse… it’s not really too Sarracenia related, but it was pretty fascinating anyway.
I got back into the garden today and managed to get some work done. I was sorting some Sarracenia seedlings out, and was repotting a few others plants just to make some more room. When I walked into there of the greenhouse where I let the seedlings grow up a bit, I was surprised to find a hummingbird stuck! I guess it was the flowering Pinguiculas that attracted it. Nice to observe the hummingbird at such a close distance, but the bird could not find it’s way out no matter how much I tried to urge it towards the door. Now, I have some chickenwire to support the woven polycarbonate roof, and the bird kept flying into it and at times would get a little trapped then wriggle free again. It kept wanting to fly up and out — and kept hitting the wire ceiling. Geez… Poor thing. The opening to the greenhouse I have is *much* lower than the ceiling height, so regardless of what I did to to try to get it out, it would not fly out of the door. My vents are covered with a screen as well, so no way of it escaping that way. So… in order for it to leave and be set free, I had to take the situation in my own hands. Literally.
[Hummingbird stuck in the greenhouse. I wonder if the hanging Drosera’s thought it was a meal?…]

[Gotcha! My greenhouse is not the place for you, homie. You could become lunch for one of my plants! Time to go, lil’ buddy…]
[I let go outdoors right after this photo. I actually felt a hummingbirds heartbeat today… ]
Posted in Blog
Tagged Carnivorous Plant, greenhouse, hummingbird, Sarracenia, stuck, The Pitcher Plant Project
Today a co-worker of mine was telling me about some news story she heard about with a UFO sighting in Mongolia… or somfin’ like that… (I guess the story was like… from today, and news clips could be found on places like this…)
But anyway, the whole UFO/alien thing reminded me of one of the plants growin’ out here that I think showed up after UFO’s invaded my grow area or something. One of the alien dudes were left behind. So I potted it up… Some lime green weird looking Sarracenia-iod-ish type plant from the planet Triffid. Or something…
Actually, it’s just a Sarracenia flava x psittacina. Heh heh. But still, looks pretty durn funny to me – like it just walked out of a space ship or something. 🙂
[Sarracenia flava x psittacina – Take me to your leader!]
[Sarracenia flava x psittacina]
One of the hybrids I did a couple of years ago caught my eye as I was doing some clean up in the yard today. Check out what a couple of years did…
***
[Winter, 2008 – Sarracenia (purpurea ssp. purpurea x rubra ssp. jonesii) x (leucophylla x rubra ssp. gulfensis) – Anthocyanin Free Clone]
***

[Fall, 2010 – Sarracenia (purpurea ssp. purpurea x rubra ssp. jonesii) x (leucophylla x rubra ssp. gulfensis) – Anthocyanin Free Clone]
One aspect of carnivores that really fascinates me are all the mechanisms used for luring and trapping a meal. Just as an example – these downward pointing hairs on the hood of this Sarracenia purpurea ssp. venosa v. burkii f. luteola make for a slippery foothold and make for an even harder time for the meal to escape. Food falls into the pit and a hairy situation serves as a obstacle for said meal. Just one of the things that make these plants so redonculously flippin’ awesome.
[Sarracenia purpurea ssp. venosa var. burkii f. luteola – leaf detail]