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 How pretty! I love how it looks like two types of spotted fabric stitched together, and the hood fabric matches the part between the seams. Not sure I ever really want to identify mine, I think I decided I like the mystery of it, I'm going to just watch it in wonder, lol.
@tippitiwichet ha! the mystery! i have a plant I bought in the 90s and have always called "weird tree" --I tried in vain to ID it for many years. I finally got a plant ID app called Picture This and let me tell you, I actually cried. It's a rock fig-- Ficus petiolaris.
i especially love the ridgey lips and the tiny teeth/frayed edges on the seams. it does lend itself to a fabric sculpture, doesn't it? i might have to do that...
@tippitiwichet happy little plant! she's gorgeous. mine's putting out thumb-sized pitchers now & i was able to get an ID-- it's St Gaya!
keep me posted-- when you start getting mature pitchers, I know a girl who knows a guy, we can get yours ID'd too!