Winter dormancy
for temperate plants is not unlike hibernation for some animals when cold
weather and a shortening of the photo-period arrives gradually in autumn and
winter. For temperate plants like Venus flytraps (Dionaea)
and American Pitcher Plants (Sarracenia) and many sundews (Drosera) it is very important to respect this rest period, for without
it a plant may get sickly and die.
During dormancy many of the pitchers, traps and leaves will turn brown or black and die back to base of the plant. You can gently remove these once they have died back completely. Below is a photo of a Venus flytrap in summer and then in winter:
Photo-period is
the length of time the sun is out. If we
take North Carolina as an example, where Venus flytraps are native, the
photo-period at the summer solstice in June is roughly 15 hours of
daylight. At the spring and autumn equinox the photo-period is about
12 hours. At the beginning of winter in December it shortens to about 9
hours, and then slowly, about a minute a day, it lengthens. For
typical North American temperate plants, the crucial time for this cooling
and short photo-period is about Thanksgiving (late November) to Valentines Day
(mid February).
Plants
outdoors in bog gardens that are set in the ground are much more protected
than plants in exposed pots above ground. Bog gardens can offer
protection for most plants even up, in the often frigid winter
climates, around the Great Lakes and upper Midwest to New
England. If early snow arrives before deeply freezing temperatures do,
the snow will act as a wonderful insulator, keeping the bog just below freezing
(32° F) as the snow cover keeps the icy air above the dormant plants.
In autumn as the plants slow down and go dormant, many folks will trim the
dying leaves away and cover the bog with extra protections such as a layer of
hay, pine needles or burlap. This will greatly add to the bog's protection.
When the worst of winter is ending the protective covering can
be removed.
If you have
potted plants outdoors they can easily take temperatures down into the 20s F
for brief periods, but continuous cold below the upper teens can kill
them. Therefore the plants should be moved to a more protected area,
such as the coolest north facing windowsills (where direct sun won't warm
the pots), or garage windowsills, or even basement window wells, where I'd
recommend also covering them with a layer of mulch. You can also help by running
refrigerated water through the pots once or twice a day, or adding ice cubes
of purified water to the soil surface to slowly melt and add to the
cooling, if the plants are kept indoors.
Some folks think
the winter temperatures need to get very cold or similar to their native
environment but this isn't true. It's really the short photo-period that
instigates dormancy. At California Carnivores in Sonoma
County, north of San Francisco, we frequently get outdoor temperatures in the 30s F and even 20s F and sometimes the teens, without any harm to temperate
plants. The greenhouse however is heated to a "sweltering" 50° F
if temperatures get below this outdoors, to protect tropical plants such as
highland Nepenthes. Day temperatures in the greenhouse when the sun
is out can warm to the 70s F without harm to the dormant plants. Our
temperate plants still go dormant and rest happily but will begin growth
earlier than the outdoor plants, sometimes as early as late January or
February. No harm has ever been seen. So indoor areas such as
lightly heated porches and windowsills in cool rooms can often be a good place
for the plants. Remember to keep the soil of dormant plants damp to wet
even during their rest period.
Allowing
temperate plants a rest period from late autumn to late winter gives them
vitality and correct flowering times the following year. It also give
growers a break from the typical routines during the growing season, and when
they begin to grow again in late winter and spring, it's a happy time and like
seeing old friends again!