My grocery store Nepenthes (which only had "bug eating plant" on the label with zero mention of species) will be telling me who it is, soon. I've never owned this family before, I don't even know if the color might fade a little like a Sarracenia does as it swells, so it still could be a spotty type, or if it will continue to deepen. No spoilers please! I am enjoying the suspense and won't even try to identify it until the pitchers open.
@fernfren That wasn't me, but I believe you. I was wondering about that, and have been watching for signs of struggle.That makes sense about the light, the few specimens I saw in the store that still had traps that hadn't withered completely (this was not one of them) were mottled, but the flytraps were all completely green. I've had it since late October, already several flytraps are starting to blush.
@fernfren Thank you, this is excellent. I've been debating uprooting a Venus flytrap or two for days, so I could sketch it from tip to root tip, and this is just the excuse I needed.
@tippitiwichet oooooh yes, i want to see that, so pls post!
@fernfren Looks like they handled the moisture issue by packing sphagnum moss in around the roots of just the flytraps. Nice trick, but doesn't handle the light issue. I want these puppies to get as red as they can :).
@tippitiwichet ok so see this redness in the topmost leaf here that i circled-- I didn't notice it at first, but that is a sign it's too bright for nepenthes. VFTs love that light tho. So if you can't separate them I'd at least turn the pot so the VFT gets more light and the N is shadier. You may want to pull the moss up higher to elevate the N. side too. VFTs can sit in standing water and love it, but Ns grow in trees, and like me, they do not appreciate the wet feets.