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Post by richardhole on Jun 20, 2013 12:19:49 GMT
Hi
What is the best and easiest way to remove dead growth off Sarracenias during dormancy? I thought it would be best to wait until the pitcher fully dies down to the base and then pull it off without cutting it. That way all the dead growth would be removed including near the base. If I cut it, then a short piece of the dead growth would remain attached to the crown and this could cause fungus. However, someone suggested I would need to be careful when pulling the dead leaves off so as not to expose much tissue on the crown as this could cause fungus. What would be more likely to cause a problem such as with fungus? A small amount of tissue ripped off on the crown to expose living tissue underneath or a small piece of dead leaf attached to the crown?
Would the best option be to pull dead leaves off only if they pull of easily and if they do not rip off easily then cut them as close to the base as possible?
If the leaf is dead on the top and still green on the bottom, is it much of an advantage to only cut the dead half off the top and leave the bottom green half attached? Or would it be best to cut the entire leaf off during dormancy when the first half dies? Or should I wait until the leaf fully dies so that the entire leaf could perhaps be pulled off right at the base? It would be less time consuming over all if the entire leaf was removed at once without having to cut half of it off and then the rest later and possibly pulling the rest of later again.
Your help would be appreciated Regards Richard.
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Post by hcarlton on Jun 21, 2013 4:40:49 GMT
I usually deal with leaves depending on the condition they're in. If they're dead all the way to the base, then I carefully pull the whole thing off. If they're only partly dead, I just cut off whatever is dead and leave the rest. If a fully dead leaf won't pull off easy though, I just try and cut it as close to the rhizome as possible. Do remember though, in the wild nobody picks off the dead leaves, and conditions vary, so different methods may work better in different areas. Try things and see what works.
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Post by richardhole on Jun 22, 2013 11:25:03 GMT
Hi
Thanks for the info
To save time and labor cost associated with pruning my hundreds of Sarracenias I thought it may be best to wait for the pitchers to fully die back to the base before removing them. It would take many extra hours for people to make several cuts on the one leaf as it progressively dies. Is it fine to leave dead growth on the plants during dormancy until the leaf fully dies bearing in mind my below conditions?
I thought the plants may be less susceptible to fungus in the wild. Bear in mind I am in the tropics on the Atherton Tableland near Cairns at 757 meters altitude. For June and July, our temperatures can often get up to 26 degrees Celsius during the day. However, the average range is from about 13 to 23 degrees for this time of a year. The mean minimum relative humidity is about 60%
Regards Richard.
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coline
Full Member
Life's essence: patience
Posts: 484
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Post by coline on Jun 22, 2013 15:04:30 GMT
Well, as I see it, it would be the best to remove the past year's growth at winter, then next year you do not deal with dead leaves, and you prune again in winter. Of course, it does not apply to purpurea or so that retain their leaves several years, but the rest of the plants it may be done.
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Post by richardhole on Jun 23, 2013 7:08:48 GMT
Hi
Thanks. That is interesting.
Any more feedback from different people’s experiences with this would be appreciated. I am not sure how important the photosynthesizing aspect is during winter as the plants are dormant. It might be possible that less nutrients gained in photosynthesis may be better to give the plants a better dormancy. Also, people suggest putting the plants in the fridge during winter where there would be no light anyway.
What would be interesting to do is an experiment where someone with identical looking plants was to put them into three groups beside each other in the same conditions. One group would have all the leaves that have some dead growth on them cut off completely down near the base so green growth would also be removed on pitchers that have half died so the only pitchers left would be the ones that are fully green. This could be done around now in mid winter and again towards the end of winter to remove the remaining dead pitchers. On the second group only the dead growth would be removed progressively as the pitchers die. This would need to be done a couple more times to the same pitchers and would therefore be time consuming overall. In the third group, the pitchers would be only removed as they fully die down to the base.
Please let us know of anyone that has done any experiments like this and if there was any difference between the three groups regarding which plants grew the best and what percentage died.
Regards Richard
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