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  #1  
Old 7th October 2008, 08:00 PM
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Cindy Cindy is offline
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Default D. paradoxa 'Drysdale'

I have two plants in the same pot and as they push each other away, they are producing roots down the sides of the pot!





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Old 7th October 2008, 09:16 PM
shawnintland shawnintland is offline
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Default Re: D. paradoxa 'Drysdale'

Nice! Hey Cindy, you have a lot more experience with these guys than me, so I'll ask your opinion; That pair is so nice together that I probably wouldn't risk anything, but I wonder; if you put them in a very wide tray of water (even on a short stand in the tray so they aren't water logged), when the roots hit the water would they start to immediately form plantlets?
I've been playing around growing some stuff in my old hydroponic tables and finding that what I thought were all the 'old rules' have twists to them...Hoyas, which shouldn't like hydro-conditions, if grown that way from seed onwards, thrive! I'm getting really thick plants from seed in no time at all and the new shoots laying in the water are super-rooted and ready for cutting/transplanting in 2 weeks!
I'm thinking/wondering if when the roots find themselves totally immersed would they have a tendancy to start immediately forming plants to emerge into the air?
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Old 7th October 2008, 10:28 PM
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Default Re: D. paradoxa 'Drysdale'

Hi Shawn, I have no idea. The roots are about touching the bottom of the container containing water. For paradoxa, I only top up to about 1" of water each time and let it dry out completely inbetween. Maybe I'll let the water stay a little higher and see what happens with the roots. Not sure if the petiolaris complex plants produce plantlets from roots. A number of tropical sundews like D. intermedia and D. capensis do though.
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Old 8th October 2008, 10:19 AM
edmund83 edmund83 is offline
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Default Re: D. paradoxa 'Drysdale'

wuw.... cindy .. i wonder how many pot of paradoxa you having in your house ... heheheheh

So intend to split the mother plant again?
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Old 8th October 2008, 02:39 PM
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Default Re: D. paradoxa 'Drysdale'

Hmmm...maybe. But I think ischan has it in TC now. So I can always buy some small plants from him to harden off...and start growing them all over again.

The plants during January this year. I think they look more compact...not so messy.


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Old 8th October 2008, 04:44 PM
shawnintland shawnintland is offline
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Default Re: D. paradoxa 'Drysdale'

Compact is cool, but I wouldn't mind a few of my plants being as "messy" as yours!
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Old 8th October 2008, 11:56 PM
TS TS is offline
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Default Re: D. paradoxa 'Drysdale'

Hi Cindy, very nice plant you have there. So healthy. What are the differences between this and the typical paradoxa? Hope you don't mind I ask this sort of stupid question, but I really wanna learn.

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Originally Posted by shawnintland View Post
Compact is cool, but I wouldn't mind a few of my plants being as "messy" as yours!
Hehe, I wouldn't mind too!
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Old 9th October 2008, 02:00 AM
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Default Re: D. paradoxa 'Drysdale'

Drysdale is just the location of where the seed came from. So no noticable difference except that the "typical" one gives me offshoots and this doesn't.

Growth wise, I kinda like this form better. Can't quite put my finger to it but I think it has a nicer shape. Then again, it could be the way I grow/pot the plants.
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Old 9th October 2008, 10:28 AM
edmund83 edmund83 is offline
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Default Re: D. paradoxa 'Drysdale'

did you notice any different shape on leaf ? you called them "drysdale " type? what mean by that?

hehehe i also asl lot question!!! ^^
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Old 13th October 2008, 11:23 AM
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Default Re: D. paradoxa 'Drysdale'

Edmund...

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Originally Posted by Cindy View Post
Drysdale is just the location of where the seed came from. So no noticable difference except that the "typical" one gives me offshoots and this doesn't.
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