These 2 are getting pretty as well:
A moorei I think, white top white pitcher, a pink lip and pink throat, as the pitchers mature, the inside of the mouth is also becoming red.:
and this one, it is mostly white with the mouth becoming red with time and the whole area underneath the lid also become red, just like areolata. Each new pitcher is a little more white.:
I am glad I did not cull any because that last one was doing nothing until a few weeks ago and it is 8 months old. It was a plain boring little green thing, then it popped a beautiful little pitcher. That is why I will keep all my seedlings until they are more mature, until they all produce this type of pitchers. Culling and destroying plants before they have the chance to show their real potential is a total waste and a risk of destroying an exceptional plant, but one that does not grow so fast, just like Adrian Slack. Who care that Adrian Slack grow slowly? it is still an amazing plant for breeding and a beauty to watch.
I am not sure why people buy hundred of seeds only to have to destroy 80% of them because they don't have the room. pity. I have seen people cull their seedlings at 2 or 3 months old, when they are only little brontosaure shaped pitchers and they cull for size and color, but that too is deceiving because some plants will grow slow at first but suddenly they will catch up or even grow faster than the other seedlings.
In the case of open pollinated plants, it is even more important to give each plant a proper time, because so many possibilities are in there.
And a last one, this will surely beat my hurricane creek white any time. All 3 plants are from the same seed batch, from just one mother plant! I had so many different looking and beautiful plants from the seed batch. :