Flying Gardens

Flying Gardens We are a butterfly garden store! We sell caterpillars, chrysalises and host plants.

Feel free to add butterfly in your language.
11/07/2025

Feel free to add butterfly in your language.

11/02/2025
BAVI
09/21/2025

BAVI

I have reopened the store sooner than expected! Problems solved💪
08/17/2025

I have reopened the store sooner than expected! Problems solved💪

FIFTY, fertilized, monarch butterfly eggs disinfected with bleach solution. I will begin harvesting the eggs by HAND and then I will WASH THE EGGS with a bleach solution.

07/11/2025

I am closing Flying Gardens butterfly farm due to freak accidents.

I hope to reopen next year. 🙏

04/22/2025

Pump up the wings 🦋
Backseat General

5x Vitamin C
01/15/2025

5x Vitamin C

how it works
11/06/2024

how it works

Discover the incredible transformation from caterpillar to butterfly and explore the bizarre, mind-blowing process inside the chrysalis. This wild metamorpho...

Hairs
10/26/2024

Hairs

So often I hear people making the assumption that small trees and shrubs and other woody plants can easily be "moved", but in most cases this is a pipe dream and destined to fail.

Why digging up and moving trees and shrubs often doesn't work :

The only parts of the roots that are engaged in absorption of water and nutrients are the distal few inches of the root, where the root hairs are (the part of the illustration circled in red), but root hairs are somewhat short-lived and don't last long as they are continuously replaced as the root grows.

As the roots continue to grow and elongate, root hairs die and are not replaced at the same site the way that branches are, which may resprout from dormant buds on the stem or shoot. Root hairs are only produced at the root apical meristems on tap roots and lateral roots, the rest of the root above that is only plumbing and transport, not absorption, though lateral roots and secondary roots can also have growing tips which produce root hairs.

When you dig up a plant, you are mostly severing those distal (as opposed to proximal) root segments that contain the root hairs, which mean that the plant now has no way of absorbing water and must regrow new roots. This is the main reason why "moving" plants so often fails. The only way to ensure that you do not sever the parts of the root that contain the root hair when moving something like a small tree is to make sure that you basically remove the entire crater of soil that the tree is growing in, which usually necessitates the use of a tree spade mounted on a small dozer.

If you ARE able to get a decent amount of roots with root hairs when digging a plant, be aware that sometimes the best way to ensure success is to sever some of the shoot up top, maintaining an adequate root-to-shoot ratio and preventing evapotranspiration of moisture from leaves.

02/18/2024

pump it up

:o
04/01/2023

:o

Inside a Hydrangea. 😍

02/13/2023

The scariest flower on Earth! 💀

Address

Miami, FL

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