Showing posts with label Butterworts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Butterworts. Show all posts

Thursday, April 19, 2012

How often should I feed my plant?



  • Pinguicula moranensis
    Pinguicula moranensis
  • Utricularia intermediaUtricularia intermedia
  • Drosera filiformisDrosera filiformis
  • Pinguicula macrocerasPinguicula macroceras
Another way I am frequently asked this is, "Can I overfeed my plant?"

The truth is, feeding your plant is the last thing you should be worrying about. Your plant only needs bugs if all its other horticultural requirements are being met. You should be worrying about the light, humidity, and water your plant is getting. Only once you have those things addressed and your plant is growing really well should you concern yourself with feeding it.

In fact, a poorly grown plant often suffers from being fed. The leaves die or get moldy. This is because the poorly grown plant can't muster the energy to properly digest the plant and so the food rots instead of being digested.

Even if healthy, your plants really do not need to be fed! They will survive perfectly well without you giving them bugs. They may grow a little slower, but they will live.

It is also likely that you don't have to feed your plants because they are getting plenty of bugs already. Unless you keep a house so clean that your coworkers like to talk about it behind your back, you actually have quite a few bugs in your house that your plant will get: gnats, roaches, flies, earwigs, and others. So relax!!

All that being said, you still probably itch to feed your plant, and I understand, so here is a simple guideline--do not feed it more than about one bug per week. If you want to feed it more often, get more plants.

P.S. Experienced carnivorous plant growers may think I'm being too hard on you, and might insist that you can feed your plants more often. The problem is that it is easy to overdo the feeding. I have conducted feeding experiments and have found that Venus flytrap deprived of food can be damaged by overfeeding. I would not be surprised if other carnivorous plants are the same way. 

How many carnivorous plants exist?



  • Drosophyllum
    Drosophyllum lusitanicum
  • Sarracenia oreophilaSarracenia oreophila
  • Utricularia macrorhizaUtricularia macrorhiza
The famous Venus flytrap is only one of many species of carnivorous plants. More than 670 species and subspecies of carnivorous plants have been described (although humans have caused some to become extinct). The genus with the largest number of species (over two hundred) is Utricularia, but many other genera exist and this FAQ discusses them all. I have prepared a taxonomical breakdown of all the different carnivorous genera, sorted by botanical Order and Family. This page is my most updated set of species listings, so you can count the number of carnivorous plants yourself. Looking at it you will see that many plants are carnivorous!

Saturday, August 14, 2010

our new shop

looks like the link did not worked on the previous post! here is one
http://www.cpquebecshop.blogspot.com

Friday, August 13, 2010

Back on track!

srry i haven't been there for a while! too much personal business! i will be posting new update soon :) stay tuned!

Visit OUR NEW SHOP!

http://cpquebecshop.blogspot.com/

Visit our new shop! we took ONLY THE BEST of all we could find on the internet that can help you growing carnivorous plant faster and stronger than ever! take a look, it wont hurt!

Monday, August 9, 2010

Back on track!

srry i haven't been there for a while! too much personal business! i will be posting new update soon :) stay tuned!