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By Vern
Posts:  232
Joined:  Mon Mar 26, 2012 10:51 pm
#146493
This is an older picture and the plants in here have long been separated into their own separate pots. But I'm curious to know what kind of sundew is the one in the far upper right corner. Is it a D.spatulata? The larger one I'm guessing is a D.capensis, right?

Also I would like to propagate more of the smaller one, since I'm curiously fond of it. I've heard a leaf cutting will do, will putting a few cuttings in wet sphagnum stimulate rooting?

Image
By fattytuna
Posts:  749
Joined:  Sun Jan 22, 2012 4:00 am
#146532
Like the others said, it looks like a spatulata.
To propagate it, either let it flower (it will produce hundreds of seeds by itself) or take a leaf cutting.

I personally prefer the water floating method for leaf cuttings. What you do is cleanly cut off a leaf and place it, sticky side up, in a jar of distilled water. It doesn't matter if its submerged, but should float. I find that i get more plants this way than just putting it in sphagnum.

For leaf cuttings, little plantlets pop out of the leaf and its the actual plantlets that grow roots.
Image
This is what you should get in a few weeks (image from growsundews.com)
By Vern
Posts:  232
Joined:  Mon Mar 26, 2012 10:51 pm
#146543
fattytuna wrote:Like the others said, it looks like a spatulata.
To propagate it, either let it flower (it will produce hundreds of seeds by itself) or take a leaf cutting.

I personally prefer the water floating method for leaf cuttings. What you do is cleanly cut off a leaf and place it, sticky side up, in a jar of distilled water. It doesn't matter if its submerged, but should float. I find that i get more plants this way than just putting it in sphagnum.

For leaf cuttings, little plantlets pop out of the leaf and its the actual plantlets that grow roots.
Oh, how cool! Are frequent water changes recommended if I use the float method?
By fattytuna
Posts:  749
Joined:  Sun Jan 22, 2012 4:00 am
#146548
Vern wrote:Oh, how cool! Are frequent water changes recommended if I use the float method?
From personal experience, its not really necessary to change it too often (if at all). Once a week should be fine. Of course, if the water turns brown or cloudy then changing the water would be beneficial.

I think that changing the water every week or so will increase the sprouting rates but again I'm not sure - it seems common sense-ish to do so. Put the jar under bright lighting (morning sun is great).
By corky
Posts:  383
Joined:  Sun Oct 04, 2009 12:56 pm
#146649
from my limited experience i find root cuttings a faster way to get a large plant,just cut off a healthy root 1 or 2 inches long and just cover in live sphagnum,wet of course,i find this method quicker

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