Cephalotus Leaf Pulling/Cutting Guide

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  • čas přidán 6. 09. 2024
  • This is our comprehensive guide on propagating Cephalotus from leaf pullings/cuttings.
    We cover how to remove leaves and pitchers from mature Cephalotus plants, how to prepare them, how they progress over the course of 6 months, and how to repot successful plants.
    The video only covers the methodology we use in our specific conditions. We can try to answer questions about other conditions in the comments section.
    See all of our plants for sale at our website: www.predatorypl...
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Komentáře • 54

  • @MrSonoru
    @MrSonoru Před 7 měsíci +1

    I got my first cephalotus about a month ago. Really cool looking plants. Mine sadly died back during the first couple of weeks I had it and I started panicking but gladly didn't throw it out. It's now growing new leaves and new juvenile pitchers. Maybe in a few months time I will try to take some leaf pullings. Great guide and definitely gave a bit more confidence to do this

  • @lorib1696
    @lorib1696 Před 6 lety +7

    I have been so shy about trying Cephalotus because I've been told again and again that they are some of the most difficult CPs to keep alive. Now after seeing this I want one. Love your videos!

    • @ivanlagrossemoule
      @ivanlagrossemoule Před 4 lety

      When I separated mine (it was one huge plant in a massive bunch) I got loads of loose leaves and pitchers. When I planted them I got a very high success rate and got tons of small plants. Sadly I moved and by the time I realized what was going on, about half of them died due to the lack of sunlight. Now I got growlights and they seem to be doing fine. I can understand why people say they're sensitive but I wouldn't worry too much.

    • @helliumballoons7546
      @helliumballoons7546 Před 7 měsíci

      in my experience, Cephs have been super easy. I got a pretty big one from Curious Plant for only 60-something dollars (I've seen others of the same size go for 300) and it's been doing great. I have it directly under my SANSI 36 watt grow bulb and I put water 1/4 of the way up the pot every week and a half so it has time to dry and not saturate the roots (I still have it in the 2 inch pot it was shipped in at the moment but I'm going to transplant it soon)

  • @ganjastrike1337
    @ganjastrike1337 Před 5 lety +6

    please continue making this quality content! thanks a lot.

  • @CarnivorousPlantsSydney
    @CarnivorousPlantsSydney Před 2 lety +1

    Love this, I havent had success in the past so I will do this to insure some survive

  • @-AnyWho
    @-AnyWho Před 4 lety +1

    i had this yrs ago, spent what i considered alot of money at the time and ended up roasting it in the sun cuz basically i didn't know what i was doing ... that's a really nice plant, i miss it

  • @alicemadness19
    @alicemadness19 Před 5 lety +1

    Awesome video and subbed, no one show the results after months

  • @twofeetfromhell
    @twofeetfromhell Před 6 lety +3

    can you guys do videos on heliamphora? like repotting or dividing for example

  • @cliffowens3629
    @cliffowens3629 Před 6 lety +3

    Fascinating. You don't dust with rootone or spritz with a sulfur fungicide?

  • @cattmandan
    @cattmandan Před 6 lety +3

    Love the Miltoniopsis in the BG! Are you all going to have Disa orchids back in stock any time soon?

  • @rafaelpmaciel
    @rafaelpmaciel Před 4 lety +4

    Hi, what's the ideal temperature and humidity for Cephalotus?

  • @susanharrison3967
    @susanharrison3967 Před 5 lety +3

    Do you not used compost only sphagnum moss? Do they stay in that all the time, great Video

  • @lonewolf.1751
    @lonewolf.1751 Před 5 lety +1

    Cool video, thanks for the info there, nice one mate.

  • @stanleychew88
    @stanleychew88 Před 4 lety +2

    can i check how do you prevent algae from growing on the dried sphagnum moss? i see that your pot was infested with algae

  • @jamiedruby9573
    @jamiedruby9573 Před 2 lety

    When doing a leaf pulling on Cephelotus do you use Maxi fertilizer as the pulling is maturing into a plant?

  • @herkusr01
    @herkusr01 Před 6 lety +2

    What light conditions are they kept in? My plants just keep putting out the non-carnivorous leaves, which may be linked to low lighting?

  • @slametbinmemet4710
    @slametbinmemet4710 Před rokem

    Semakin lama semakin banyak di temukan tanaman bergetah indo boss...? Trimakasih ...
    ?

  • @ANTSPlantation
    @ANTSPlantation Před 6 lety +2

    can you do a leaf cutting on a baby ceph plant that is about one inch in diameter?

    • @kenjiro2676
      @kenjiro2676 Před 6 lety

      Yetimama sun you can but don’t expect the leaf cutting to be a good size.. I would wait for your cephalotus to grow more in size before taking leaf cuttings.

  • @philippe5518
    @philippe5518 Před 3 lety

    What is the best season of the year to take the leaf cuttings?

  • @h20water22
    @h20water22 Před 5 lety +1

    When does you guy have Cephalotus UC David available for this year?

  • @100daysgaming6
    @100daysgaming6 Před rokem

    ok thank dude.. i want to buy this one.. later

  • @xAIRx666
    @xAIRx666 Před 4 lety

    is it possible to use root growth gel or stimulants on the cuttings?

  • @EmileKleinhans
    @EmileKleinhans Před 2 lety

    Do you fertilize them until they can produce pitchers large enough to catch bugs?

  • @alltomfagersta
    @alltomfagersta Před 4 lety

    Nice video !

  • @plantguy9
    @plantguy9 Před rokem

    Heard these plants grow very slow, but just how slow?

  • @chevyvega6622
    @chevyvega6622 Před 3 lety

    what size pots are these, 3.5 x 5? what brand of long fiber are you using?

  • @Jesus-eg3yb
    @Jesus-eg3yb Před 2 lety +1

    What is the ideal care for a Cephalotus?

    • @OmaeWaMoShindeiRYU
      @OmaeWaMoShindeiRYU Před 2 lety +1

      high humidity and light, keep it moist but not drowning with distilled water

    • @vivimannequin
      @vivimannequin Před rokem +1

      Plenty of airflow if you want to overhead water which is better. Basically they like the same soil traits as nepenthes (terrestrial nepenthes)

  • @josejulianalavayanten6363

    Q bien muestras todo, good

  • @jesuspulido6714
    @jesuspulido6714 Před 5 lety +1

    Hello did you have the cuttings wet all the time ?

    • @PredatoryPlants
      @PredatoryPlants  Před 5 lety +2

      Yes. The pots were in trays with about 1 inch of standing water all the time.

    • @jesuspulido6714
      @jesuspulido6714 Před 5 lety

      @@PredatoryPlants did you sterilize the LFS moss ?

  • @ronspitchers9824
    @ronspitchers9824 Před 6 lety +1

    My climate allows me to grow Cephs outside, so without a controlled environment what is the best time of year to do leaf cuttings, I would imagine late winter?

  • @jonathanlai163
    @jonathanlai163 Před 6 lety +2

    Do you have seeds to sell ?

    • @PredatoryPlants
      @PredatoryPlants  Před 6 lety

      Unfortunately, not right now. When we do have seeds, they will be posted here:
      www.predatoryplants.com/Carnivorous-Plant-Seeds-s/50.htm

  • @h20water22
    @h20water22 Před 6 lety +1

    What do they eat?

  • @maosung5219
    @maosung5219 Před rokem +1

    ۱۴۰۲~۵~۲۴❤❤🌸🌺🧡

  • @mochicocaine
    @mochicocaine Před 4 lety

    He looks like Loki but w shorter hair

  • @stektirade
    @stektirade Před 5 lety +1

    Why don't you ship all your plants potted like some other high end nurseries? It makes no sense that you unpot the plant at the nursery then stick it in bare root and then include a pot and sphagnum and ship it. That seems very lazy to me and pointless. Plus it shocks the more sensitive plants.

    • @PredatoryPlants
      @PredatoryPlants  Před 5 lety +2

      That's not at all what's happening. We grow our sales plants in sphagnum plugs exactly so their roots will not be disturbed when we ship them.

    • @stektirade
      @stektirade Před 5 lety

      Predatory Plants exactly, you don't ship them potted. And sphagnum plugs is still not better than potted. You had to pull them out of the pot they were initially in to do it, therefore they are being disturbed. And them not being in the stationary propper sand/soil they naturally grow in. Oh then when the customer gets theirs they again have to pull it out (disturbing the roots) and planted again. So again every propper professional nursery ships them potted period because their roots are very sensitive. Also you guys ruin nepenthes with all of your hybrids and naming just for a quick buck. Keep them pure or natural hybrids at least.

    • @PredatoryPlants
      @PredatoryPlants  Před 5 lety +1

      Sorry to have been unclear. No unpotting happens anywhere in the process. The plants are grown in the sphagnum plugs for their entire time in our greenhouse. We produce these plants, and that's how they grow. They do just as well as the fully potted plants grown next to them on the same bench.
      Our potting instructions clearly tell the customer to wrap the plug they receive with the fresh moss, so no root disturbance occurs during that step either. The roots are not disturbed until the customer decides to repot later with fresh soil/moss. This is a necessary and beneficial disturbance of the roots that every grower should participate in regularly.
      As for our Nepenthes hybrid program: We have been working on it since 2013, so there's nothing quick about the bucks. We appreciate your input about our breeding, and we do always prioritize species and natural hybrids when available.

    • @stektirade
      @stektirade Před 5 lety

      @@PredatoryPlants i find that to be a lie. because the cephs i see on your videos are all in pots. you cannot possible grow cephs just in a plug laying around a green house. you still are lazy and dont ship your stuff planted. then you include a pot with the package what sense does that make? plus shipping them bare root is not good for them once again.

    • @PredatoryPlants
      @PredatoryPlants  Před 5 lety +5

      I'm sorry that this has made you so upset, but I assure you there are no lies in my responses. Mature Cephalotus are slightly different from other plants because they produce runners that we want to encourage and harvest. I assure you that our sales Cephalotus are indeed grown in plugs and are very happy.
      You seem to be caught up on the term "bare root." We don't actually ship our plants truly "bare root" since they are shipped in the moss plugs that they are fully established in. You can see a good example of this growing method here: czcams.com/video/Cx_BUfcjNxU/video.html
      I realize that this is an emotionally-charged issue for you, and I apologize again that it has caused so much distress.