avery
27th January 2009 - 08:00 AM
avery
27th January 2009 - 08:02 AM
avery
27th January 2009 - 08:04 AM
avery
27th January 2009 - 08:05 AM
Iggy
27th January 2009 - 11:55 AM
Lovely tuberous sundews!!
Iggy
Dieter
27th January 2009 - 18:33 PM
I can only agree with Iggy: great plants!
Cheers
Dieter
jimscott
27th January 2009 - 19:37 PM
I just love closeups of dew globules!
UtricSeb
28th January 2009 - 04:54 AM
Wow, beautiful. Your pics come out with very nice colors. What light are you using?
Carlos Rohrbacher
28th January 2009 - 17:59 PM
A lot of drops, very impressive!
Regards.
Carlos.
Daniel O.
28th January 2009 - 19:54 PM
Hi Avery,
again very nice plants.
Best regards,
Dani
Stefano
28th January 2009 - 19:55 PM

your plants ever ceases to amaze me, I love that third one
avery
31st January 2009 - 09:15 AM
So happy to know that you guys love these tuberous as much as I do ~~ I will post more when they grow up ~~ This is the first year that i see my tuberous comes up in time in Northern Hemisphere climate. I was really afraid I would lose all of them especially these tuberous have a bit shorter rest period than those that are well adapted to our climate.
Sebastian, I grow them under sunlight and I usually take pictures using sunlight as well ~ Sunglight is strong enough to take better quality pictures with higher F value and lower ISO and I like the warm colour temperature as well ~~
avery
17th February 2010 - 16:05 PM
avery
17th February 2010 - 16:08 PM
avery
17th February 2010 - 16:09 PM
avery
17th February 2010 - 16:10 PM
avery
17th February 2010 - 16:11 PM
UtricSeb
18th February 2010 - 03:22 AM
Hmmm.. can't see any of the pictures you posted yesterday.
mr_p_c_
18th February 2010 - 15:34 PM
woooow! speechless! beautiful!
Tuuagso
24th February 2010 - 02:48 AM
Really really impresive

I'm sure there's no any Drosera like those in my country, your plants are really exotic.
Anyway, what is that kind of red stem on Drosera's peltata leaves?
avery
14th March 2010 - 02:01 AM
Oh Tuuagso ... Sorry to have missed your post ...
That could be certain kind of stems from the Drosera gigantea ~ I obtained some small plantlets last time I tried to propagate it by leaf cuttings but this is also the first time I see these stems. I think there should be some dormant bud on its leaves and I will try to bend the stem a bit closer to the soil surface to see ~
Tuuagso
14th March 2010 - 04:48 AM
Wow, that's really interesting, thank you for responsing and good look with your experiment!
I think they are like a kind of special roots that help the plant to climb in case it were on the ground or climbing rocks in the wild, maybe... It would be interesting to see if is it possible to get plants from this rooted-leaves.
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