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farm

  • Sale!

    close up of lawn tractor

    Original price was: $4.99.Current price is: $0.99.
    A closeup of an older model husqvarna orange or light red lawn tractor used for cutting St. Augustine and Bermuda grass type weeds on a small home rural farm in a suburban neighborhood. A toy barn used for entertainment and storage of chicken feed in background. Found in the backyard sitting on a freshly mowed yard in Loxahatchee, Palm Beach, Florida.
  • Sale!

    pleopeltis polypodioides resurrection fern

    Original price was: $4.99.Current price is: $0.99.
    Pleopeltis polypodioides aka Resurrection fern typically grows out of live oak trees, epiphytic, with moss and other vines up close. Found in south Florida near the Everglades, Miami & Palm Beach.
  • Sale!

    painted lady vanessa cardui butterfly

    Original price was: $4.99.Current price is: $0.99.
    Painted Lady Vanessa cardui aka Thistle Butterfly or Cosmopolitan found in South Florida feeding on nectar of a yellow flower 2 inches in size with a brown, yellow, white and orange broken pattern. This is a small native non-invasive butterfly found around weeds and sweet plants near water.
  • Sale!

    hamelia patens perennial firebush

    Original price was: $4.99.Current price is: $0.99.
    Hamelia patens perennial shrub or small tree in the coffee family, Rubiaceae is native to the American subtropics and tropics. This Firebush was found in South Florida calling butterflies and bees.
  • Sale!

    milkweed for the monarch caterpillars

    Original price was: $4.99.Current price is: $0.99.
    Milkweed aka Asclepias is a herbaceous perennial flowering plant named for its milky latex substance for cardiac glycosides. Found in south Florida near the Everglades and Miami Dade County. Monarch caterpillars eat milkweed. In fact, the monarch butterfly is also known as the “milkweed butterfly.” The milkweed plant provides all the nourishment the monarch needs to transform the Monarch caterpillar into the adult butterfly.  But these plants are rapidly disappearing, due to the loss of habitat stemming from land development and the widespread spraying of weed killer on the fields where they live.

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