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Avatar for Ewintczak
Jul 8, 2023 9:23 AM CST
Thread OP
Aurora, Illinois
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This pitcher plant is the lone survivor of my original carnivorous plants - a small family/variety I bought ~4 years ago. So it has sentimental value for me to save.

Unfortunately it's companions succumb to soil gnats. This pitcher plant barely survived the onslaught. It's sickly appearance in these pictures began during this attack... it's only become worse with the mold.

The mold first appeared after my treatment for the soil gnats: I mixed Neem oil extract and sprayed the soil surface, thoroughly cleaned the water basin the plants pots were in, and then let it all dry out for a few weeks. The whole room stank of the oil for a long while, but the gnats quickly disappeared.

As it was drying, this white fuzzy mold appeared all over the soil and moss (the other plants were too far dead at this point; I waited until too late to treat them apparently). The mold doesn't appear to be on the plant itself (just the moss and soil), but it is not doing well nonetheless.

I've watered it maybe 3x over a few weeks since this treatment, letting it dry between. The mold shrank a bit but is still pervasive, and the moss is all but gone. New shoots of the pitcher plant seem to be struggling out and die quickly before even developing a head.



I use filtered or distilled water and keep it insde in a bright south facing window.

Any advice for a care plan to help this guy revive would be greatly appreciated.

Thank you,
Eric

It's former glory.
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Jul 16, 2023 1:42 PM CST
California Central Valley (Zone 8b)
Region: California
@Ewintczak, I wish I had seen this last week when you first wrote.

I don't think anyone has given you good instruction on keeping carnivorous plants. Sarracenia are bog plants, they are ALWAYS in water. The water can be up to the top brims of the pots but not over the crowns.

They also need a cold winter to survive more than just a couple years. Mine live outside year round. The temperatures at my house are in the mid teens during winter and up over 100 in summer (today we're going for 111).

Your Sarracenia aren't dead yet but, soak the entire pot to completely hydrate the moss then leave them always sitting in water. Peel the moss off the tops of the crowns. This winter, find a cold spot (around 40 degrees) and leave it for 3 or 4 months.
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Jul 16, 2023 1:48 PM CST
Name: Lee-Roy
Bilzen, Belgium (Zone 8a)
Region: Belgium Composter Region: Europe Ferns Hostas Irises
Lilies Lover of wildlife (Black bear badge)
These aren't houseplants.

Get a big tub somewhere, sink in the garden, fill with dirt and plant them out. They'll be happier outside year round to fend for themselves.
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Jul 16, 2023 6:21 PM CST
California Central Valley (Zone 8b)
Region: California
They can be grown indoors but need a sunny sunny window and a cold (in an unheated garage) winter.

They get huge when happy so you would need a lot of space on your window sill. Smiling
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Jul 20, 2023 1:26 PM CST
Mid Hudson Valley of N.Y. (Zone 6a)
I would hit it with SULFUR based fungicide. DO NOT use copper based!

Sarracenia are not houseplants. 99.9% of the time that someone has a problem with their sarracenia it's because they're growing it indoors. They don't last long indoors. They need 6+ hours of direct outdoor Sun a day minimum and indoor Sun isn't as strong as outdoor. And they need 3-4 months of winter dormancy. Water with distilled water, rainwater or reverse osmosis water only. NO tap water (unless the TDS is below 50ppm) or other bottled waters. During the growing season they should be sitting in a water tray of one of the above water types. Taken care of properly they will multiple easily.
Avatar for Saintsslav
Oct 23, 2023 6:42 AM CST

Cool
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