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General Non-Mantis Discussion
Other Insects & Invertebrates
beginner advice: low vs high land
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<blockquote data-quote="frogparty" data-source="post: 205785" data-attributes="member: 2870"><p>miranda and ventrata are by far the two easiest all around nepenthes ever. thats why they show up at home depot and lowes.</p><p></p><p>Learning about species requirements will better allow you to determine what species are best for you in your own climate.</p><p></p><p>REAL lowland plants like hot muggy nights, with minimal temp drop. That means none for me in SO CAL where the day/night difference is high</p><p></p><p>REAL highland plants dont care about daytime highs, as long as night temps have a 15+ degree drop with a humidity spike</p><p></p><p>REAL ultrahighland plants are more picky about daytime highs over say, 85 and REALLY REALLY picky about the night time temps and humidity</p><p></p><p>Most windowsill suitable plants are actually intermediate/highland plants that do just fine wherever as long as theres enough light and humidity</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="frogparty, post: 205785, member: 2870"] miranda and ventrata are by far the two easiest all around nepenthes ever. thats why they show up at home depot and lowes. Learning about species requirements will better allow you to determine what species are best for you in your own climate. REAL lowland plants like hot muggy nights, with minimal temp drop. That means none for me in SO CAL where the day/night difference is high REAL highland plants dont care about daytime highs, as long as night temps have a 15+ degree drop with a humidity spike REAL ultrahighland plants are more picky about daytime highs over say, 85 and REALLY REALLY picky about the night time temps and humidity Most windowsill suitable plants are actually intermediate/highland plants that do just fine wherever as long as theres enough light and humidity [/QUOTE]
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General Non-Mantis Discussion
Other Insects & Invertebrates
beginner advice: low vs high land
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