At first this plant grew well for me, then it died back somewhat. It grew larger, then died back again. It kept doing this and each time it died back to a larger plant and grew larger than the previous time.
Drosera capensis 'Hercules' foreground, 'typical' and 'alba' in background |
Drosera capensis Hercules |
I had it growing inside my house next to some typical and alba capensis, so figured the position was not too bad. It turns out that my capensis Hercules did not like this position, its leaves got stretched out and is started to lose colour. I don't think it had enough sunlight there.
Capensis Hercules Petioles are about 4mm to 5mm wide |
I moved it outside, where it grew a little but was really not happy. I moved it back inside again and expected a better result. I tried a few different positions and eventually moved it to my greenhouse, and put it in its own pot, where it has really started to grow.
I am not sure if it is the location, or having its own pot, or the incredible number of insects it catches, but it is now growing well. To be honest, I can't imagine having a greenhouse without a few carnivorous plants to control the insects.
Drosera capensis 'Hercules' catching a lot of insects |
This year my Hercules sent up a flower scape. It grew many, many flowers and the scape grew incredibly long.
The flowers on capensis Hercules are absolutely huge, far larger than any capensis flower I have seen.
The seeds have just started to ripen. I plan to plant a few and see what the seedlings are like.
Drosera capensis Hercules flower |
This plant was originally registered as an interspecific hybrid between Drosera capensis 'alba' and Drosera aliciae. The current belief is that this is a wide leaf variant of Drosera capensis.
From what I have been told, capensis Hercules grows reasonably true from seed, which indicates that it may be pure capensis rather than a hybrid. My first seedlings are still tiny, so it is too early for me to know how true to type they will grow for me.
The leaves on capensis Hercules are rather wide. Which is similar to, but distinct from other wide forms of capensis. The leaves grow reasonably long.
Drosera capensis Hercules on left, capensis True Giant on the right |
capensis Hercules flowers are HUGE |
Young plants of capensis Hercules and True Giant |
The capensis Hercules plant I am growing was taken as a cutting from a clone, meaning it is the true Hercules. Seed grown plants may be slightly different and should never be labelled as Hercules.
I sell some carnivorous plants through my for sale page. If I sell or trade any seed grown plants I will make sure that they are labelled Hercules x self or something to indicate that they are not the true Hercules clone. If I ever trade the true Hercules clones I will also make sure to label this to distinguish between them and its seedlings.
No comments:
Post a Comment