Venus flytrap what to know around it?? i want get a plant a venus flytrap is nice but i...

i want get a plant a venus flytrap is nice but i want to know is nearby any other plants like it.but my focus is within the fly trap i am a fish hobbyist and i ahve a ten gallon tank spare i hold and planning on planting it their i live in Virginia and it is cold here at most minuscule now but my house is dry can i put the plant surrounded by a normal pot ??? why does it put away flys ?? i pretty much need to know everything almost this plant in proclaim to grow it right i always required one
Answers:    I love Venus flytraps. I have grown them indoors within Massachusetts. They can be grown from seed or you can purchase a plant that is to say already big enough to own traps.

Wild flytraps grow in coastal bogs surrounded by North and South Carolina. The places that Venus flytraps grow generally enjoy very poor soils so they inevitability extra nutrients (such as nitrogen) which they can get by catching and digesting insects.

They resembling to grow in a mix of sand and peat moss. They also similar to bright sun, and a moist environment, but may not want to sit in too much dampen. If I were you, I'd put an inch or two of gravel at the bottom of the ten gallon container, then a thicker level of sand and peat moss mixed together. Plant the flytraps in the peat moss/sand mix and hold on to it moist, but not soaking wet. The container will be great for keeping the humidity up.

Keep it in bright sun and nurture it any type of insect that fits in the trap. (You don't hold to feed it, but to be precise the fun part.) (There are more details beneath "cultivation" here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Venus_Flytr... )


Other plants that are like Venus Fly Traps

There are other carnivorous plants:

Sundews are covered within tiny tentacles, which have sticky stuff on them that traps insects. Once the insect is trapped they curl around the insects. (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sundew )

Pitcher Plants are another brand of carnivorous plant, but they don't move. Their leaves are shaped like pitchers and are bursting with gooey. Insects get caught contained by them and drown, then the plant digests them. (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pitcher_pla... )


There are other plants that move:
Mimosa is a really uncluttered plant that folds it's leaves when you touch it: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sensitive_p...
we grew ours in a thoroughly small pot and fed it crickets that I get from a bait shop. you will enjoy have one.