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Venus Flytrap Dionaea muscipula

The Venus Flytrap is fascinating and much misunderstood. There is a lot of nonsense given as advice about growing and propagating these plants, so let's set the record straight.

Dionaea is a plant which never fails to fascinate, which could be its downfall: in the wild (southern United States, especially Carolina) it is critically endangered from overcollection. Growing from seed is simple but slow, with the added satisfaction that your plants have not been torn from their habitat. If the following points are borne in mind, Venus Fly Trap is actually one of the easiest of plants to grow.

All of the above may seem rather complicated, but suffice to say that if they are grown in small pots stood constantly in rain water, given full sun and the traps left well alone, they will thrive.

Sowing

Use a dwarf pot, about 5" (13cms) diameter and fill it with moss peat up to the rim, and 'strike off' the surface to leave it level. Press this down lightly with the base of another similar-sized pot to give a level sowing surface. Carefully distribute the seeds over the surface of the peat and then stand the pot in a saucer or tray of rainwater. Do not cover the seeds, or shade the pot. Leave it in full sun, preferrably in a greenhouse, and keep the water topped up. We recommend sowing quite late in the spring to take advantage of lengthening days and strong direct sun to encourage the seeds to germinate. They can take several months to emerge, during which time quite a thick growth of moss can appear. This should not be discouraged and indeed seems to provide the right sort of environment for the seedlings when they emerge.

The seedlings remain very wee their first year and only at the beginning of their third year should they be transplanted to individual 3" (7cms) pots. Plants can be carefully divided when they are large enough, at about five years old.