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Reddit mentions of 3 Small Sized B52 Giant Venus Flytraps - Fly Trap - (Dionaea Muscipula) Carnivorous Plant 3 inch Pot

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Reddit mentions: 2

We found 2 Reddit mentions of 3 Small Sized B52 Giant Venus Flytraps - Fly Trap - (Dionaea Muscipula) Carnivorous Plant 3 inch Pot. Here are the top ones.

3 Small Sized B52 Giant Venus Flytraps - Fly Trap - (Dionaea Muscipula) Carnivorous Plant 3 inch Pot
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3 Live healthy actively growing (not dormant) Small Sized B52 Giant Venus Flytrap PlantsComes with a 3 inch net potComes with a detailed full page caresheet, full page FAQ sheet, and a full page potting diagram written by Joel the owner of Joel's Carnivorous PlantsShipped barerootComes with loose sphagnum moss appropriate for Carnivorous Plant soil
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Found 2 comments on 3 Small Sized B52 Giant Venus Flytraps - Fly Trap - (Dionaea Muscipula) Carnivorous Plant 3 inch Pot:

u/Jasper9080 ยท 13 pointsr/videos

I just got an order from Amazon about 3 months ago. Joels Carnivorous Plants I think. They're not hard to maintain. Lots of sun and only distilled water and mine are growing just fine and have caught at least 3 flies so far.
Found them here JoelsCarnivorousPlants on Amazon

u/CoverFire ยท 1 pointr/SavageGarden

I prefer about a 40 percent perlite and 60 percent peat moss mix. I have found that most of my plants do better in peat than long fiber spagnum. Spagnum moss dries out too fast for my liking. I typically just use it as a top dressing for my plants because it prevents dirt splatter during rainy season and I like the looks of it better than peat moss and brown-ass perlite. I do have a few sundews in my indoor setup that seem to thrive in 100% spagnum but if I miss a watering it will dry up fast and the dews get pissed. The key to big fly traps is light. Give them as much unfiltered light as possible. Keep the medium damp though. Do not let them dry out. Mine go from wet to damp constantly. I'll fill the tray and let the tray dry out (not the soil) completely, then fill it again. As I mentioned earlier, traps love top watering. This is not for humidity reasons but to supply fresh oxygenated water to the roots. Be patient, depending on where you get your traps from they will most likely not be adult plants. Flytraps grown from seed can take 3+ years to become mature adults. Tissue culture plants are most common and will take less time than seed grown to reach maturity. If you want big traps as fast as possible feeding them will speed up growth dramatically. You can used dried blood worms for this. Rehydrate them and place them in traps. Don't forget to stimulate the trap from the outside after you feed it to insure the plants go through with a full digestion cycle. If you don't the plant will think it closed by accident and reopen in a day or two. There are plenty of videos and tutorials on this if you need more details. My recommendation for the fastest route to big traps is to buy some B52 clones. They are the most vigorous and healthy looking traps I own, hands down. I'm not sure about import/export laws to Canada but I got my B52 clones from Joel's Carnivores on amazon. After I planted them they blew up. Quickest I've ever seen and with less light than all my other traps due to the location of my bog that I put them in. Here is the link to them https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00Q1UEP8Q?ref=yo_pop_ma_swf

Sorry for such a long post. I try not to do that. If you want more info feel free to PM me.

Here is a photo of the B52s in my bog. They are not even full sized because they just came out of dormancy and flowering sucks up a lot of energy. Later in the season they will be bigger and better. https://imgur.com/b3zJ8jA