where did the first purpurea come from? i'm betting Newfoundland as it's the closest place in North America to Europe and our bogs are covered in S. purpurea - even dwarf and all-green varieties. they grow in Sphagnum bogs where the lower leaves are grown over, hence, they are not as high as the ones in Switzerland.
@Piranhaboy01 About 100 years ago a Swiss lady went for several years to the USA and was so amazed by the plants that she brought some specimens and planted them into the bog in approx. 1000 m altitude, where they found obviously very fitting conditions and thrived very well. But I don't know where she got the plants from.
@shartmeyer oh, i see. they may actually have their origins from the US. there's one huge difference between these Swiss transplants and typical Sarracenia in wetlands. the Sphagnum continually grows up over the plant, burying it's lower leaves here in North America whereas those in the video are growing in something closer to marsh conditions where the ground is not rising over time... hence the height and mass of old leaves. they don't grow like that here.
where did the first purpurea come from? i'm betting Newfoundland as it's the closest place in North America to Europe and our bogs are covered in S. purpurea - even dwarf and all-green varieties. they grow in Sphagnum bogs where the lower leaves are grown over, hence, they are not as high as the ones in Switzerland.
Piranhaboy01 1 month ago
@Piranhaboy01 About 100 years ago a Swiss lady went for several years to the USA and was so amazed by the plants that she brought some specimens and planted them into the bog in approx. 1000 m altitude, where they found obviously very fitting conditions and thrived very well. But I don't know where she got the plants from.
shartmeyer 1 month ago
@shartmeyer oh, i see. they may actually have their origins from the US. there's one huge difference between these Swiss transplants and typical Sarracenia in wetlands. the Sphagnum continually grows up over the plant, burying it's lower leaves here in North America whereas those in the video are growing in something closer to marsh conditions where the ground is not rising over time... hence the height and mass of old leaves. they don't grow like that here.
Piranhaboy01 1 month ago
Beautiful clusters!
STFUbelgium 4 months ago
Speaker listens like Oettinger XD
Saphirasfly 1 year ago
siggy man your lucky, the stands in that video are nuts even if not native, they look great!
Prima!
xXCradleofFilth666Xx 2 years ago