View allAll Photos Tagged FlyTrap
Got these from a Lowe's cute. They are coming back now and looks like one will have a flower. Looks like my single plant has become three.
Zoe Collins
From the archives of ethan pettit gallery - www.ethanpettit.com
North Brooklyn Pneumatic Archives:
ethanpettit.blogspot.com/p/facebook-albums-of-north-brook...
Copyright 2018 the artists. You must ask permission to use this image. Intellectual property laws apply.
From the archives of ethan pettit gallery - www.ethanpettit.com
North Brooklyn Pneumatic Archives:
ethanpettit.blogspot.com/p/facebook-albums-of-north-brook...
Copyright 2018 the artists. You must ask permission to use this image. Intellectual property laws apply.
Venus Mc Flytrap Shoes. My variation with repainted teeth white with green details and painted vines on heels.
The Venus flytrap (also referred to as Venus's flytrap or Venus' flytrap), Dionaea muscipula, is a carnivorous plant native to subtropical wetlands on the East Coast of the United States in North Carolina and South Carolina. It catches its prey—chiefly insects and arachnids— with a trapping structure formed by the terminal portion of each of the plant's leaves and is triggered by tiny hairs on their inner surfaces. When an insect or spider crawling along the leaves contacts a hair, the trap closes if a different hair is contacted within twenty seconds of the first strike. The requirement of redundant triggering in this mechanism serves as a safeguard against a waste of energy in trapping objects with no nutritional value.
---WIKIPEDIA
From the archives of ethan pettit gallery - www.ethanpettit.com
North Brooklyn Pneumatic Archives:
ethanpettit.blogspot.com/p/facebook-albums-of-north-brook...
Copyright 2018 the artists. You must ask permission to use this image. Intellectual property laws apply.
Venus flytrap at Holly Shelter, NC, May 1944, taken by John Hemmer. From the Department of Conservation and Development, Travel Information Division Photograph Collection, State Archives of North Carolina.
The largest of our tissue culture-raised Venus flytrap seedlings. These we planted into styrofoam cups with the idea of providing some insulation for the roots for overwintering them outdoors.
Dionea leaves - it almost died from the frost, so I removed some yellow leaves and played with them.
giant puppets by Yvette Helin
From the archives of ethan pettit gallery - www.ethanpettit.com
North Brooklyn Pneumatic Archives:
ethanpettit.blogspot.com/p/facebook-albums-of-north-brook...
Copyright 2018 the artists. You must ask permission to use this image. Intellectual property laws apply.
A flytrap hangs from the rafters at the Hominy District campsite during the 2012 Pawhuska In-Lon-Schka dances. Photo by Benny Polacca/ Osage News