Caring For Carnivorous Plants


1. DO NOT USE CHLORINATED WATER!  If your water is chlorinated, please allow it to sit for at least 48 hours before using.

2. Give your plant as much sunlight as possible.  If inside, a southern exposure is preferable.

3. You may put the plant in full sun outside during warmer months. Frost will not harm the plant but freezing will cause damage.  Plants are perennial when planted in the garden but will go dormant in cooler months.

4. Your plant must remain wet at all times. If left in a container, leave it sitting in ½ to 1 inch of water. Most plants can remain in their container for up to two years. When you repot it use only peat moss.

5. If a pest such as aphids, mealy bugs, scale, fungus gnats, etc., appears on your plant, then you may treat it with Ortho Bug B Gone which can be purchased at the Garden Center.

6. If you leave your plant in its container, it may be brought inside during the winter, trimmed to 1 inch from the soil level, placed I in a plastic bag and stored in the refrigerator until spring.

7. DO NOT FERTILIZE YOUR PLANT! They will catch everything they need to survive. If you have the plant inside, you may catch insects and feed it yourself, but do not use hamburger meat for a substitute, it is not a complete meal for the plant.

8. With the Venus Flytrap, The trap will only open and close a certain number of times before it dies and is replaced by a new one. If you want to see the trap close, please use an insect. After being fed, the trap will remain closed for at least one week.

Some of the carnivorous plants we carry are Venus Flytrap, Cape Sundew, Round Leaf Sundew, Purple Pitcher Plant, Yellow Trumpet, and Ladies in Waiting.