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Post by mcmcnair on Aug 21, 2012 16:29:30 GMT
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Post by esteban on Aug 21, 2012 21:49:36 GMT
congratulations!! very nice plants! Esteban
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Post by Carolyn on Aug 24, 2012 17:04:37 GMT
Very nice! I'm totally envious of your Dwarf Peacock, I've been looking for one but can never seem to find.
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Post by mcmcnair on Aug 28, 2012 18:24:00 GMT
I just stuck cuttings of mine, we'll see if they take
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Post by paulbarden on Aug 28, 2012 19:52:28 GMT
Thats quite a collection! I see you have a mix of distinctly lowland and highland species/hybrids. Do you have plans to accommodate their very different climate needs?
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Post by mcmcnair on Sept 4, 2012 16:52:51 GMT
nope, they are all growing together in a single terrarium. Actually, none of the plants in there are actually Highland species, ramispina and glabrata are the closest and they're intermediates. The glabrata is relatively new, but the ramispina has been going crazy since I put it in there a few months ago. Apparently, I have a magic grow chamber
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Post by Dave Evans on Sept 20, 2012 22:30:33 GMT
I'm pretty sure the "kampotiana" was really a N. smilesii. Just look at the plant, it is half N. smilesii.
N. 'Dwarf Peacock' on the other hand is half N. kampotiana and looks completely different.
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Post by RL7836 on Sept 27, 2012 14:39:25 GMT
Actually, none of the plants in there are actually Highland species, ramispina and glabrata are the closest and they're intermediates. The glabrata is relatively new, but the ramispina has been going crazy since I put it in there a few months ago. N. glabrata is listed as highland in this chart. I acquired two N. glabrata at the beginning of the summer & both suffered through intermediate conditions in my basement over the summer. Neither produced pitchers and one aborted a pitcher it produced during cooler weather. Hopefully they will become more tolerant as they become better established.
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Post by mcmcnair on Sept 27, 2012 17:56:06 GMT
Dave, the plant came from a user on Terraforums named Nepguy and he told me he made the cross himself and he seemed pretty knowledgeable to me so I believe him when he said it is kampotiana x (khasiana x alata) but I guess we'll never really know for sure RL7836, oh yea kinda forgot about glabrata
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Post by Dave Evans on Oct 4, 2012 0:12:38 GMT
There are some folks that used to distribute N. smilesii as "N. kampotiana". They did so for years on end... Like for about 30 years, N. smilesii was known as "N. kampotiana", while Jan Schauler continued to be under some mysterious conviction that these species were all varieties of N. mirabilis! Most of these plants distributed as "N. kampotiana" were/are females too. They are still available, but finally as labeled correctly, like your plant. The N. smilesii you have could easily be the same clone as the mother of "N. kampotiana x (khasiana x alata)" along with the females I have on this website: www.rci.rutgers.edu/~dpevans/Nepenthes/N_smilesii.htm
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Post by mcmcnair on Oct 5, 2012 1:06:16 GMT
ah very interesting, maybe it was N. smilesii then. Well no matter what it is, its a pretty nice hybrid if I do say so myself
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Post by mcmcnair on Nov 13, 2012 17:40:21 GMT
Here's an update on the plants in my wardian case. Excuse the somewhat crappy photos my good camera is broken and I'm stuck using my phone. Let's start with the ampullaria N. ampullaria 'Lime Twist' IMG_3950 by mcmcnair, on Flickr Note that the pitcher in the back has an entirely red peristome and the front pitcher has the "lime" peristome IMG_3952 by mcmcnair, on Flickr N. ampullaria 'Bronze Nabire' IMG_3956 by mcmcnair, on Flickr IMG_3955 by mcmcnair, on Flickr IMG_3954 by mcmcnair, on Flickr N. ampullaria Brunei Red x Harlequin IMG_3957 by mcmcnair, on Flickr IMG_3959 by mcmcnair, on Flickr N. ampullaria 'Harlequin' IMG_3961 by mcmcnair, on Flickr N. ampullaria Brunei Green, looking kinda red... IMG_4032 by mcmcnair, on Flickr IMG_4034 by mcmcnair, on Flickr N. ampullaria Brunei Red Speckled IMG_4035 by mcmcnair, on Flickr IMG_4036 by mcmcnair, on Flickr My biggest amp, N. ampullaria Cyclops Mts. IT'S FUZZY and bronze when it IMG_3962 by mcmcnair, on Flickr IMG_3964 by mcmcnair, on Flickr IMG_3965 by mcmcnair, on Flickr IMG_3966 by mcmcnair, on Flickr I count 4 basals right now, possibly more to come! IMG_3967 by mcmcnair, on Flickr N. ampullaria Tricolor, (Green to Bronzey-Orange Peristome with red and orange spotting) IMG_3971 by mcmcnair, on Flickr IMG_3970 by mcmcnair, on Flickr This particular pitcher is the oldest living one on the plant IMG_3975 by mcmcnair, on Flickr This is one of the newest IMG_3977 by mcmcnair, on Flickr This is what it looks like as it inflates... It retains the fuzzyness and note the spotting on the tendril IMG_3978 by mcmcnair, on Flickr My big ol' pot o' mirabilis, which includes N. mirabilis Trang, N. mirabilis 'Pink Thai', N. mirabilis var. echinostoma Typical, and N. mirabilis var. echinostoma Purple IMG_4013 by mcmcnair, on Flickr 'Pink Thai' IMG_4006 by mcmcnair, on Flickr N. mirabilis var. globosa IMG_4015 by mcmcnair, on Flickr IMG_4016 by mcmcnair, on Flickr N. khasiana IMG_4014 by mcmcnair, on Flickr My smallest Nep, I've had it for over 6 months and it has only put out like 2 new leaves...N. distillatoria Pink IMG_4020 by mcmcnair, on Flickr That's a typical piece of perlite just underneath it for scale... IMG_4022 by mcmcnair, on Flickr N. alba, that's right I grow it as a lowlander IMG_4023 by mcmcnair, on Flickr IMG_4024 by mcmcnair, on Flickr IMG_4025 by mcmcnair, on Flickr N. bellii IMG_4026 by mcmcnair, on Flickr IMG_4027 by mcmcnair, on Flickr IMG_4028 by mcmcnair, on Flickr N. albomarginata Red Gunung Jerai IMG_4029 by mcmcnair, on Flickr IMG_4031 by mcmcnair, on Flickr N. thai, got it at the ICPS conference, hasn't pitchered for me yet... IMG_4037 by mcmcnair, on Flickr Neither has my N. glabrata, but considering it's growing in lowland conditions I'm not surprised... IMG_4009 by mcmcnair, on Flickr N. maxima (formerly eyemae) IMG_3998 by mcmcnair, on Flickr IMG_3999 by mcmcnair, on Flickr IMG_4001 by mcmcnair, on Flickr Probably my favorite Nepenthes I've got right now... N. ventricosa Variegated :laaa: IMG_3989 by mcmcnair, on Flickr IMG_3991 by mcmcnair, on Flickr IMG_3992 by mcmcnair, on Flickr The first pitcher it produced in my care IMG_3990 by mcmcnair, on Flickr Here are all the hybrids... N. x 'Singapore Gardentech' (ventricosa x ampullaria) IMG_3984 by mcmcnair, on Flickr IMG_3985 by mcmcnair, on Flickr N. ventricosa x truncata or truncata x ventricosa I don't know... IMG_4008 by mcmcnair, on Flickr IMG_4007 by mcmcnair, on Flickr N. thorelii x truncata IMG_3993 by mcmcnair, on Flickr IMG_3994 by mcmcnair, on Flickr IMG_3997 by mcmcnair, on Flickr I really love the colors on this hybrid IMG_3995 by mcmcnair, on Flickr IMG_3996 by mcmcnair, on Flickr N. truncata x veitchii I don't know which cross this was but I think it is a beautiful plant, unfortunately I broke off the most recent tendril and the pitcher that opened before that got a fungal infection on the peristome IMG_4002 by mcmcnair, on Flickr You can see the infection pretty well in this pic IMG_4004 by mcmcnair, on Flickr N. xchelsonii IMG_3981 by mcmcnair, on Flickr IMG_3982 by mcmcnair, on Flickr abberant mutant pitcher IMG_3983 by mcmcnair, on Flickr To be continued in another post
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Post by mcmcnair on Nov 13, 2012 17:45:25 GMT
N. x'Dwarf Peacock', I chopped the mother plant into a bunch of cuttings and this was the growth point cutting IMG_3988 by mcmcnair, on Flickr IMG_3986 by mcmcnair, on Flickr N. kampotiana x (khasiana x alata) IMG_4018 by mcmcnair, on Flickr I really love the stem and midvein coloration on this hybrid IMG_4019 by mcmcnair, on Flickr IMG_4017 by mcmcnair, on Flickr Unknown hybrid that I traded somebody in Hawaii for, i don't remember who... IMG_3968 by mcmcnair, on Flickr N. "Meteor" (maxima x clipeata) IMG_3960 by mcmcnair, on Flickr An overall view of the right side IMG_4038 by mcmcnair, on Flickr the right side but closer to the middle, the huge leaf is from N. x dyeriana IMG_4039 by mcmcnair, on Flickr the overall left side IMG_4040 by mcmcnair, on Flickr The whole right IMG_4041 by mcmcnair, on Flickr The whole left IMG_4042 by mcmcnair, on Flickr The only plants I did not really photograph were N. lowii x campy, N. ramispina, N. xdyeriana, and an unknown hybrid that is probably an alata/maxima of some sort. Now for the nepenthes that aren't in my wardian case. My monster N. truncata IMG_4049 by mcmcnair, on Flickr N. “Song of Melancholy” IMG_4044 by mcmcnair, on Flickr N. ‘Tiger’ x unknown (possibly mirabilis) IMG_4045 by mcmcnair, on Flickr IMG_4046 by mcmcnair, on Flickr N. mirabilis x ‘Tiger’ IMG_4047 by mcmcnair, on Flickr N. alata Boschiana Mimic IMG_4052 by mcmcnair, on Flickr IMG_4053 by mcmcnair, on Flickr N. “Fredder” (splendiana x tentaculata) IMG_4050 by mcmcnair, on Flickr IMG_4051 by mcmcnair, on Flickr N. xsplendiana x (xtiveyi x veitchii) IMG_4054 by mcmcnair, on Flickr N. eyemae x (jacquelineae x izumiae) IMG_4055 by mcmcnair, on Flickr IMG_4057 by mcmcnair, on Flickr N. veitchii (from Luca) IMG_4061 by mcmcnair, on Flickr N. ‘viking’ x truncata IMG_4062 by mcmcnair, on Flickr The ‘Tiger’ hybrids with “Song of Melancholy” in between IMG_4048 by mcmcnair, on Flickr The lower section of my window. I’m going to make a rack to hang all of these from soon IMG_4060 by mcmcnair, on Flickr The whole thing at night IMG_4063 by mcmcnair, on Flickr and during the day
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Post by jhtunion on Nov 14, 2012 0:25:57 GMT
Mason my friend, this is amazing!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! How hot are you keeping the air in the house, or are you doing anything special or nothing at all to the neps outside of the wardian case?
I am loving your pics and can't wait to see the real thing in december!
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Post by mcmcnair on Apr 4, 2013 17:00:17 GMT
A small update on some of the newer pitchers in my collection. Just so you all know, all of my nepenthes are grown in true lowland parameters with 80% humidity or higher constantly with temperatures around 88-93F during the day and 70-75F at night. So keep that in mind when noticing that I have burbidgeae, fusca, glabrata, alba and ramispina growing in lowland conditions and doing fine if not thriving. N. viking x truncata seedgrown, originally from Heli who got it from Exo Just after opening N. viking x truncata just opened by mcmcnair, on Flickr Different pitcher, but about two weeks after opening N. viking x truncata 4 by mcmcnair, on Flickr N. viking x truncata 2 by mcmcnair, on Flickr N. gracilis 'Cinnamon Bun' N. 'Cinnamon Bun' by mcmcnair, on Flickr N. 'Princess Bubblegum' N. 'Princess Bubblegum' leaf characteristics by mcmcnair, on Flickr N. 'Princess Bubblegum' stem by mcmcnair, on Flickr N. 'Princess Bubblegum' by mcmcnair, on Flickr N. spathulata x campanulata "Carmen", just potted it up yesterday but i've had it for nearly 5 months and its been living in the paper towel i received it in N. "Carmen" by mcmcnair, on Flickr N. baramensis/rafflesiana var. elongata N. baramensis by mcmcnair, on Flickr N. fusca 'Lich' first pitcher produced in my care, opened a couple days ago N. fusca 'Lich' by mcmcnair, on Flickr same plant but the pitcher it came with to show a fully mature pitcher N. fusca 'Lich' mature pitcher by mcmcnair, on Flickr These next two are for Exo, N. khasiana N. khasiana pitcher by mcmcnair, on Flickr N. khasiana by mcmcnair, on Flickr N. rafflesiana Agristarts Clone, first pitcher in my care N. rafflesiana Agristarts Clone by mcmcnair, on Flickr N. thai N. thai Just before opening by mcmcnair, on Flickr N. truncata HLxLL seedgrown N. truncata by mcmcnair, on Flickr N. truncata peristome by mcmcnair, on Flickr and making its debut appearance! My oldest nepenthes N. ramispina! I've had it for about 2.5 years now N. ramispina 2 by mcmcnair, on Flickr N. ramispina by mcmcnair, on Flickr That's it for now! Hope you all enjoyed!
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