Carnivorous Plants/Snowstorm

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Question
Hi, I have had my american pitcher plant outdoors for a while now.Ilive in salt lake city, utah, which is a usda zone six. my pitcher plant had some new growth, but just last night it started to snow. I have been watching the temp, it hasn't gone below twenty. should I bring my plant in?

Answer
Hi Ryan,

Do bring your plant in if it started new growth.  Normally, in zone 6 plants wouldn't be growing yet, but I'm not sure how your plant spent the winter.  We're in zone 8 here in Oregon, and ours have not started spring growth yet, and we are still getting freezing weather. I usually see the first new shoots or flowers stalks starting in March.  If it's staying above freezing, feel free to leave it outside.  For more detailed care on growing North American carnivorous plants, consider our volume # 1 "Grow Carnivorous Plants" DVD.  This can help you avoid the pitfalls so common to new growers.  http://www.cobraplant.com/index.php?main_page=product_info&cPath=38&products_id=...

Good Growing!

Jeff Dallas
Sarracenia Northwest
http://www.cobraplant.com

Carnivorous Plants

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Sarracenia Northwest

Expertise

If your plant is showing poor growth, discoloration, abnormal leaves or possible infestation, the growers at Sarracenia Northwest can help! Carnivorous plant experts Jeff Dallas and Jacob Farin will help you diagnose the problem and get your plants on the right track. Their no nonsense approach has helped thousands of growers all over the world. They can help you too!

Experience

With over 40 years of combined experience, Jeff and Jacob has definitely taken a straight forward approach to growing carnivorous plants. They have encountered many types of diseases, abnormal growth and infestations related to carnivorous plants, and they know what it takes to get plants looking beautiful and healthy again.

Education/Credentials
Authors of Secrets to Growing Beautiful Carnivorous Plants for Your Home and Garden and producers of the Grow Carnivorous Plants! DVD Series. They also produce a monthly video podcast to illustrate how plants cycle through the seasons.

No terrariums. No myths. No nonsense.
Just the straight facts from guys who grow and propagate
thousands of carnivorous plants each year.


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