- Sold By: Fort Bragg CarnivoresThis cross of Rubra Jones Alba x Psittacina Alba is a real winner. This plant shows signs of both parents; more erect leaves, and a lid that matches Rubra, from Psittacina the plant grows lower to the ground, and has curvature of the leaves near the mouth. Plant is currently house in a 6 inch pot, and has multiple growth points. Plants tallest pitcher stands at 6 inches. The plant in the picture is the exact plant for sale. Not a division, but the entire plant. I currently ship Plants out on Monday’s and Thursdays, Because I don’t like for plants to sit over the weekend. So please allow a few days before shipping. I ship all plants bare root wrapped in moist paper towel. Due to county regulations, it is illegal for me to ship plants potted. I leave the pitchers on (except during dormancy) and do my best to ship with as little damage as possible. However, I cannot guarantee that the leaves or flowers will arrive undamaged. They are delicate after all. CPR15
- Sold By: Kimber's CarnivoresHello Everyone, what we have here is a MBRS original creation. A very vigorous unique looking cross. This plant looks like the anthocyanin free (all green) leucophylla with a smaller diameter tube. The mature height of the is cross is 25 inches. Medium size plants are near flowering size. Best planted in 4 inch size pot. All plant are shipped on Tuesday's when your order is paid for by Sunday before noon PST We ship priority mail year round.
- Sold By: Brambles BotanicalsWe’re selling some small, dormant plants of this wonderful, vigorous hybrid. Both dormant and in active growth, gypsicola x agnata tends to produce beautiful pink to bronzy leaves. (I believe the agnata parent plant is actually agnata “Red Leaf” which would explain why this plant colors up so easily.) The flowers are ultraviolet with round petals and dynamic purple, white, and yellow markings and venation around the flower throat. This is a fantastic beginner butterwort.
- Sale! Sold By: Brambles BotanicalsDrosera adelae "Giant" is a must-have for your carnivorous plant collection. Given a deep pot and healthy growing conditions, this Australian sundew will reward you with dewy, maroon-colored leaves reaching up to a foot long or more! WHEN GREATLY DISTURBED, THESE PLANTS MAY DIE BACK BUT THEY WILL RETURN FROM THE ROOTS! We are selling recently divided sections so you will be receiving a healthy section of roots that will start to produce new plants soon after being potted. Please see below for shipping information.
- Sold By: Brambles BotanicalsThe “Yucca Do” complex is a fun one and we’re still working on collecting all of them. There are up to 7 different plants in total (1712 through 1718) that were wild-collected in Mexico in the mid-90’s by Texas-based Yucca Do Nursery and then introduced into the Atlanta Botanic Garden library. The numbers are an abbreviation of a more complicated system. “Yucca Do 1713” is almost certainly a part of the Pinguicula esseriana complex but its exact identification is still uncertain. Under intense light, 1713’s leaves can flush into a pinky bronze color while the thick leaf edges will remain light, creating a unique, contrasting display. It seems that 1713 does need seasonal temperature and/or light fluctuations to flower.
- Sold By: Brambles BotanicalsThe “Yucca Do” complex is a fun one and we’re still working on collecting all of them. There are up to 7 different plants in total (1712 through 1718) that were wild-collected in Mexico in the mid-90’s by Texas-based Yucca Do Nursery and then introduced into the Atlanta Botanic Garden library. The numbers are an abbreviation of a more complicated system. “Yucca Do 1717” is almost certainly a part of the Pinguicula esseriana complex but its exact identification is still uncertain. Under intense light, 1717’s leaves can flush into a pinky bronze color while the thick leaf edges will remain light, creating a unique, contrasting display. It seems that 1717 does need seasonal temperature and/or light fluctuations to flower.
- Sold By: Wilful InkFantastically vibrant carnivorous plant art prints are available in 4 designs. Original illustrations are hand drawn in ink and watercolour before being printed digitally to fully capture the fine details. Available individually or purchase the set. A4 and A5 sizes.
- Sold By: Wilful InkFantastically vibrant nepenthes art prints are available in 4 designs. Original illustrations are hand drawn in ink and watercolour before being printed digitally to fully capture the fine details. Available individually or purchase the set. A4 and A5 sizes.
- Sold By: Wilful InkFantastically vibrant carnivorous plant art prints are available in 4 designs. Original illustrations are hand drawn in ink and watercolour before being printed digitally to fully capture the fine details. Available individually or purchase the set. A4 and A5 sizes.
- Sold By: Wilful InkFantastically vibrant Darlingtonia californica art print. These carnivorous plant prints are available in 4 designs. Original illustrations are hand drawn in ink and watercolour before being printed digitally to fully capture the fine details. Available individually or purchase the set. A4 and A5 sizes.
- Sale! Sold By: Brambles BotanicalsDrosera prolifera is a delightful tropical sundew from the rainforests of Queensland, Australia. It is also known as the “Hen and Chicks Sundew” because, in addition to small flowers, the scapes produce tiny new plants! The latin name, prolifera, means “proliferate:” to increase rapidly in numbers or multiply. Even though a single plant may be small, we would highly recommend placing your plant in a pot that’s a good 6 inches wide so that there’s enough room for it to send out scapes and produce new plants which will, in turn, send out scapes and produce new plants. This is a great little sundew for the terrarium. It loves to be humid and moist in a mossy mix.
- Sale! Sold By: Brambles BotanicalsPinguicula gypsicola x sp "Köhres" (Koehres) is a Mexican butterwort hybrid that is essentially a less expensive and more easily grown Pinguicula gypsicola, albeit with slightly broader leaves. The plant’s father, sp "Köhres" (Koehres), is believed to be Pinguicula gypsicola x moranensis, so there’s a lot of gypsicola genes in this cross. The name "Köhres" probably originates from this German nursery of the same name, though I believe the cross came from Oliver Gluch initially. It's a fun, easy hybrid with long, thin carnivorous leaves and gypsicola-like purple flowers. Under intense light, the leaves produce purple coloration along the margins of the leaf base creating an even more visually complex plant, especially around the crown of the plant.
- Sold By: Brambles BotanicalsPinguicula ‘Weser’ is a very forgiving, easy growing butterwort that’s a great beginner plant. The cross is Pinguicula ehlersiae x moranensis. The flowers are a vibrant pink with darker purple coloration where the petals meet and a stark, solitary white streak at the throat. The leaves can be an intense pink under high light or larger and green under low light. ‘Weser’ is a classic hybrid that has been around since the 1980s. I believe its name comes from a German river near where the hybridizer lived.
- Sold By: Brambles BotanicalsNative to the Mexican state of Nuevo León, the graceful, diminutive Pinguicula gracilis is a delightful little carnivorous butterwort that loves to divide and multiply. It’s an easy grower that produces white flowers with a larger lower central lobe that also features a greenish-yellow spot near the throat. The typical gracilis’s flower stalk can reach over 2 inches tall, but this “Stalkless” variety rarely produces any visible stem, so the flowers open between the leaves of the plant itself! The plants we have available are about 1 inch across (which is adult-sized for gracilis) and capable of producing flowers.
- Sold By: Brambles BotanicalsPinguicula kondoi is a wonderful Mexican butterwort with strikingly veined white flowers and colorful, thick little leaves. There is some confusion and controversy over whether kondoi is synonymous with and should be referred to as reticulata, but for now the debate is still open and kondoi appears to be the most generally accepted name. That is also what was on the tag of the original plant that I received. We’re selling some small plants that are about the size of a quarter.