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Show HN: A free site to explore and discover 6k plants

voisin
11 replies
1d7h

I’d love if this included outdoor plants, shrubs, trees, and had a filter for hardiness zone.

ryebread777
8 replies
1d7h

I’m on it! What sorts of things do you care about when you’re looking for outdoor plants? Anything besides hardiness zone? Maybe categories for trees, shrubs, etc?

zdrummond
1 replies
1d6h

This might be a stretch, but I would love to know what outdoor plants are native to my area.

jefb
0 replies
1d6h

This would be an awesome feature. It would be a good resource for plant identification and I won't inadvertently introduce an invasive species into my local environment.

ccorcos
1 replies
1d6h

I’ve been building a permaculture garden and I want to know

- usda hardiness zone - sun/shade tolerance - geographic origin - is it a nitrogen fixer - soil pH preference - wet/dry soil preference - when does it fruit?

This is a decent resource: https://permacultureplantdata.com/

voisin
0 replies
1d5h

Maybe to add on: whether it is pollinator friendly, when it blooms (not sure if this differs from fruiting, but I think so?), whether it is edible, part of a guild (if so, show other guild members)

pwenzel
0 replies
1d6h

For outdoor plants, I would really want to know what plants are drought tolerant. Climate change is drastically altering summers in Minnesota (wildfire smoke, drought, high AQI, high temps, extreme downpours).

It would also be really great to search for pollinator friendly plants (https://bluethumb.org is an excellent reference)

phoxtricks
0 replies
1d6h

The number one thing to know for outdoor plants is if they are invasive or not.

(So tired of managing Garlic Mustard, Japanese Knotweed, Bittersweet and Buckthorn)

lordswork
0 replies
1d6h

The regions where the plant is considered native, how aggressive it spreads (there is some metric that captures this IIRC), and regions where it is labeled as invasive. The PictureThis app shows this info, and it's incredibly useful.

01100011
0 replies
1d6h

Water usage, edible or not, color changing leaves, shade tolerance, soil compatibility, flowers or not, color of flowers.

Not sure if there's a way to say 'messiness factor'... some trees drop a lot of crap besides leaves.

It would be great to find native plants for your area.

pwenzel
0 replies
1d6h

The first thing I looked for was hardiness zone. I live in Minnesota and our weather is...particular.

pfdietz
9 replies
1d5h

Does it classify by where they are native? Some of us like to plant only plants that are native to where we are living. For others, at least classify by their potential for invasiveness.

Other attributes: toxicity (when eaten or even touched), deer resistance, allelopathic potential, pollinator friendliness.

julianeon
5 replies
1d3h

I used to be into native plants and that's a big ask.

Assuming a USA buyer, you'd have to ask for their zip code, then match that to the plants, many of which would probably have to be individually coded & entered (the zip codes they are native to), a map blur across the US which would vary for each species.

The binary qualities (toxic/nontoxic) on the other hand seem easy to add.

For invasiveness: that may be a reason why not too many "Amazon for plants" websites exist. But a simple binary "flagged as invasive", like a red dot on its product page, would be a terrific addition.

ethbr1
2 replies
1d

But a simple binary "flagged as invasive", like a red dot on its product page, would be a terrific addition.

Agreed!

In terms of difficulty:benefit, a binary invasive flag would get most of the way there. E.g. English Ivy, Bradford Pears, Mexican Petunia, creeping bamboo.

Buuuuut... this looks like it's mostly for house plants, for which invasiveness is less of a concern.

However, I think it should mostly generalize to outdoor plants as well.

At least in the US, you could simply add USDA hardiness zone [0], which roughly indicates the boundaries a cultivar can survive winter (freezing) and summer (heat), and is almost always listed.

I'd be shocked if there wasn't a zipcode-to-USDAH converter out there.

[0] https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hardiness_zone#United_States...

ryebread777
1 replies
8h4m

It is more targeted at houseplants now but only because that’s what I know more about. Definitely love these ideas and want to make it better suited for outdoor plants. It could also be a good motivator to encourage people to create an account, so that they can get personalized results based on their location! I think hardiness zone and invasive status are good first steps.

ethbr1
0 replies
4h40m

It's an awesome site and kudos on the design!

I like the focus on what your target user actually wants (that isn't addressed by existing solutions).

PeterisP
1 replies
1d

"Flagged as invasive" where? Every invasive species has a place where they're a perfectly nice local native.

julianeon
0 replies
45m

I was assuming this is US-oriented, so invasive in the US was my presumption. If the customer base also includes Europe, it could accommodate that also. On the other hand, if you're assuming the userbase is truly global, that would get complicated.

zamadatix
2 replies
1d5h

Another attribute/attribute extension that would be helpful is toxicity for pets in particular.

ryebread777
1 replies
1d4h

There is a filter on the plant list for pet-safe! Look for the paw icon. Haven’t pulled this info onto the plant detail page yet though.

zamadatix
0 replies
1d

I was so focused on the filter drop downs I didn't even think to look for it as a plant category! Thanks

vidyesh
7 replies
1d7h

Congrats on the tech upgrade!

Since this is not an open source project, before I bombard you with technical questions I have to ask, are you open to discuss the structure of your app? Like about your sources, images, etc?

ryebread777
6 replies
1d7h

Sure! Happy to answer most things as I’m looking to share but also to get feedback and new ideas on those topics.

vidyesh
5 replies
1d7h

Awesome! Feel free some or all.

Few of my queries you mostly answered elsewhere in your replies about images and how you get the data.

How did you determine which plants to list? Is it just a database of all the unique plants from all sources or just a general plant database?

I see each plant shows price + x stores, does that mean you are archiving the prices and not scraping real time? How are you determining the time interval for that?

How are you handling wrongly or typo listed plants from your sources?

Since you mentioned this is using next and django, what are you using shopify for?

Are you an affiliate for most of them or nothing like that so far?

Sorry I don't really have any valuable feedback apart from what everyone mentioned, Search is really slow.

And some or most external links have an extra / in their hyperlink, so at

  https://www.getanyplant.com/plant/4f5952a72087bce5e5c28a72c76c7563 

  https://planetdesert.com//products
Thank you.

ryebread777
2 replies
1d5h

I just list all of the plants sold at any of the stores I currently integrate with. I use a scientific taxonomic name database to make sure that the binomial names (genus, species) are legit and not miss-spelled and all of my liastings are anchored to that. I match products to binomial names through a process thats that uses a really complex regex, plus some manual labeling. Experimenting with using more ML here.

Price/availability data is updated on a nightly basis. Probably want to increase that frequency, though no one has complained about stale data yet, so not high priority.

Getting some affiliate relationships set up right now! Already have two added in the past week.

That extra / is mysterious... I will dive into that after work.

vidyesh
1 replies
1d3h

Thank you so much! I am not that experienced building large scale projects so really appreciate your replies in thing post.

I am quite surprised that shopify doesn't have hotlink protection for images!

I match products to binomial names through a process thats that uses a really complex regex, plus some manual labeling. Experimenting with using more ML here.

Thats what I wondering. I am building something similar, region specific for books and sometimes the names are just a little off or partial or alternate names. I am currently doing a string comparison to match at least 80-90% of the words in the title, which works okay for now. So thank you for the ideas.

Your product update frequency is very interesting, I always thought scraping for price aggregation meant one has to make sure its very frequently updated. My approach is a bit different, it only scrapes on search, so not really scraping all the sites. Not the best approach, but its scary to me to scrape complete websites and that much data lol I currently am not using a db either but scraping and caching for 30mins, that specific item which now I think about is a bad idea if I want to make this a scalable project. I should start using a database indeed.

Some feedback on the UI/UX, instead of having 'All plants' selected on the homepage, it would be nice to instead have a smaller grid of plants from each type/tag on the home page itself. Selecting any of the tag would work the same as now but homepage will have more to explore because currently its just overwhelming to do anything on the homepage. I am just looking in specific tags or just searching.

Edit: This is a great resource for adding more info about pet friendly plants to the listed plants. https://www.aspca.org/pet-care/animal-poison-control/toxic-a...

ryebread777
0 replies
1d3h

Thanks for the advice! I too am surprised by that. The Django version of my site had something similar! The home page showed plants grouped into categories kind of like Netflix. But when I transitioned to react I limited the scope. But I might go back to that!

One other tip - many sites have APIs that will give you their product data. You may need to contact them about getting access. Or it may be publicly available. But that is better than scraping if it is possible.

pastor_bob
1 replies
1d6h

Since you mentioned this is using next and django, what are you using shopify for?

Looks like they're just pointing to images hosted by others, most of which are Shopify sellers. One weird trick to save on bandwidth costs...but obviously problematic in the long term.

ryebread777
0 replies
1d6h

Currently evaluating alternatives for hosting images rn. Open to any suggestions!

z3t4
5 replies
1d7h

How did you find the images? How did you solve the copyright issue?

ryebread777
4 replies
1d7h

Right now either they are from Wikipedia, or they are from one of the stores selling plants. I have been reaching out to many stores to request permission to use their images in this way and luckily a few have been kind enough to grant it. Those are the images I use. If you scroll down far enough though you will see there is still a need for many more.

giarc
1 replies
1d7h

Could you use AI to generate images for those you don't have a real photo of yet?

ryebread777
0 replies
1d6h

I experimented with that few months ago and it was very bad unfortunately. Though it may have improved. Probably for common plants it would work excellent (bell pepper, monstera) but most of the plants on the site are fairly obscure, especially the ones without images. I wouldn’t want to create a misleading image. Another AI approach might be to create simple illustrations of plants I don’t have images for, using other images as reference. I haven’t explored that yet!

ryebread777
0 replies
1d3h

Awesome!! Surprised I didn’t know that as I’ve explored plantnet in the past. I’ll add those in!

the__alchemist
5 replies
1d7h

This is great!

Btw, something I learned recently about house plants: In an analogous way to sneakers, there is a large subculture built around certain varieties of them. They get to be expensive, there is a network of trading, there are ones associated with high status, there are knockoffs (not joking) etc. Very interesting! This site does not appear to be about that subculture.

soared
1 replies
1d6h

Great idea to avoid the viral varietals as they tend to be more difficult to keep alive since everyone tries to produce them. Also very nice to shop at local stores to avoid the tik tok midnight variegated monstera nonsense!

(Not sure if always but variegated->less green->less chlorophyll->harder to keep alive)

steve_adams_86
0 replies
1d6h

I think your last point is always true, yes. I’ve never seen it not be true across a wide range of plants, whether terrestrial or aquatic.

steve_adams_86
0 replies
1d6h

There are also varieties with temporary genetic expressions (often used as knockoffs), so it’s like buying a white sneaker that gradually turns green, haha. Some of these plants are $100-$500 for a 3” pot with a single leaf of growth.

As the new growth appears, the genetic expression is no longer the desired type. It’s a real racket.

nom
0 replies
1d6h

An interesting niche I came across is Carnivorous plants, where the seeds of a successful new cross can fetch 1k USD in auction. For a plant that no one knows how it will look yet.

Like this one https://www.carnivero.com/collections/auction-items/products...

People also hike through the remotest areas to find new wild species. Very cool.

ChainOfFools
0 replies
1d6h

Some of them, like clivia, have a non-trivial lottery component to their hybridization and breeding that makes buying and crossing even a couple of relatively er, garden variety examples a potential ticket to fame, fortune and startdom in the clivia-verse.

stephenitis
5 replies
20h18m

one of the hottest trending plants, the monstera thai constellation is missing

stephenitis
2 replies
18h48m

what are you using to power your search if i may ask?

ryebread777
1 replies
7h58m

Right now it’s just a db query on display_name with ilike :skull:

stephenitis
0 replies
5h5m

What kind of database are you using? Postgres has a pretty search built in, I'm sure you can get an easy win here

hanniabu
0 replies
17h22m

How'd you go about getting the list of all the places you can buy the plant?

mft_
5 replies
1d7h

As someone that has struggled trying to find plants to suit a particular garden in the past, I love your site!

(And I just spotted the pet safe tab - even better!)

Edit: could you include temperature suitability? Including plants that can or can't cope with snow, for example?

ryebread777
4 replies
1d7h

Good idea!! I’ll admit I came at this having much more experience with Houseplants than gardening, but I definitely want it to serve many communities. Thanks for the suggestion! Is that basically the same thing as “zone?” I think that should be doable - I will look into it! Would love to know any other features that would be valuable from the gardening perspective.

mft_
1 replies
1d7h

Temperature range = hardiness zone, I think?

Also... soil pH, maybe?

mtgentry
0 replies
1d6h

Would be cool to sort by ‘community’ too. If you get really deep into native planting, folks recommend you get plants native to your geographic area. California has lots of these communities for example: https://www.laspilitas.com/nature-of-california/communities

sp332
0 replies
1d5h

If you have a USDA zone map, make sure you're using the 2023 version. They hadn't updated the map in... ever, I think?

mtgentry
0 replies
1d7h

Yeah I’d love this too. I live in SoCal and I’m doing my yard with native plants. Some things I’m having trouble finding: 1) plants that bloom in seasons other than spring 2) plants that aren’t native but can work in my climate 3) plants that will do ok in clay soil 4) plants with a small footprint for a small yard. AI has helped a lot but it would still be helpful to have filters like these.

rubslopes
4 replies
1d6h

A bit off topic, but there's a game called Strange Horticulture that I'm playing and loving it. It's a phantasy investigation game. The plants are not real and they have magic properties, but still, I think whoever loves plants will have a lot of fun with it.

ryebread777
1 replies
1d6h

I'll check it out! Sounds kinda similar to a game I'm playing rn on switch called dredge, though that focuses on fish.

rubslopes
0 replies
1d2h

I know Dredge, and yes, that's a good comparison! Both games have an eerie atmosphere that I find comforting.

contingencies
1 replies
12h1m

Oh yeah that game rocks. I'd recommend it to anyone with kids (especially those with an interest in plants) around 5-9 range. https://www.strangehorticulture.com/

rubslopes
0 replies
7h39m

I have a lot of difficulty finding a game that my wife will also enjoy, and she loved this one.

ivolimmen
4 replies
1d7h

I am a bit disappointed; I was expecting plants that cost a minimum of 6K... But: I do like the site!

ryebread777
2 replies
1d7h

Don’t worry, If you are interested in buying $6k plants I will create a new site just for you lol

pvg
1 replies
1d

For that high-end market segment, I'd be thinking recurring revenue - plant subscriptions, plant timeshares, plant concierge service, etc.

ttyprintk
0 replies
21h24m

Very true for saltwater aquariums. Plants can be moved in and out, but if your airbnb has a saltwater aquarium, you need the number someone who does house calls.

voidUpdate
0 replies
1d7h

I was expecting a lot of photos of plants in very high resolution

marban
3 replies
1d7h

How do you pull in the commercial offers?

ryebread777
1 replies
1d7h

Web scraping or using site APIs!

pyuser314
0 replies
1d7h

ha, thanks, that too! Nice site.

pyuser314
0 replies
1d7h

Guess: this person is associated with one of the shops to buy.

johncole
3 replies
1d7h

How long did it take you to move from v1 to v2 to v3?

Cool site!

ryebread777
2 replies
1d7h

Here’s a rough estimate. Though of course this was a side project (~10hrs / week) and much of the time was spent learning.

V1 - Wordpress and jupyter notebooks (2 months)

V2 - Django (7 months)

V3 - Django + React (3 months)

spooky_action
1 replies
1d7h

What were the jupyter notebooks for? Did you run your backend in notebooks?

ryebread777
0 replies
1d7h

Wordpress version was basically just static plant pages. And I used jupyter notebooks to update them with new data (like product price and availability). Pretty funny to think about now

danielvaughn
3 replies
1d6h

I really love the custom icons, it makes me wish the thumbnails were botanist illustrations.

ryebread777
2 replies
1d6h

That would be so cool! I'd love to explore generating images like that with AI.

wizzwizz4
0 replies
22h30m

I'd consider that deceptive. Botanist drawings are technical, so I tend to treat illustrations in that style as factual in some sense, but AI can ape the style quite nicely while getting all the details wrong. You wouldn't want AI-generated technical documentation, would you? It's the same here.

Can't you just find images, the same as you find plants? Or manually add them, or something. Maybe commission some, if you can't find anything for a certain plant.

danielvaughn
0 replies
1d2h

I bet LLMs would be pretty good at that since there's likely a large repository of public domain botany drawings from the past few hundred years.

OwenFM
3 replies
23h38m

I couldn't see any way for me to specify my location, to ensure I could actually buy the plants.

Upon clicking one of the plants, I see it was only American sites.

I get that this is just a hobby for the moment, but even if there was just a note somewhere, "USA only", that would have been appreciated.

It still irks me how Americans tend to treat the other 96% of the world as though we don't even exist on the same planet; that we're some sort of exotic tourist destination, or a spawn point for immigrants.

gerdesj
1 replies
22h25m

To be fair to OP, this is a work in progress and it seems reasonable that they have not yet internationalized it. The plants are listed with their binomial names front and centre rather than localized names, but the prices are in $, there is no flag or currency symbol at top right and its a .com domain.

Parochialism isn't the preserve of the US although I still chuckle at being congratulated on my command of English by a shop assistant in Naples (Florida). I just thanked them rather than pointing out that I am ... actually ... English!

readyman
0 replies
17h57m

I still chuckle at being congratulated on my command of English by a shop assistant in Naples (Florida). I just thanked them rather than pointing out that I am ... actually ... English!

Naples in a nutshell. This story made my day.

ryebread777
0 replies
23h19m

Thanks for the feedback - sharing this project has really opened my eyes to my own bias there. Still thinking through how to best expand the site to other countries but in the meantime I'll make sure to mention that the site is US-centric when I share it going forward.

JohnHaugeland
3 replies
1d2h

I would greatly appreciate any feedback on the site as well as any advice on how to grow it.

This is very cool

Things I would want:

1. Appropriate growing zone (ideally USDA hardiness zone low and high limit for Americans; others for other countries)

2. Filter by produces food

3. Needs pollinating partner; if so, what's appropriate (eg if you're looking at a Bing cherry it should tell you required and to get a Stella Ann, a Van, or a Black Tartarian; if you're looking at a Bavay's Green Gage it should tell you not required, but providing will double yield, and to get an Italian Blue Plum.)

4. Producing time-of-year

5. Water requirements (people in Arizona shouldn't grow rice)

6. Importation issues (many of these will be unavailable to a Floridian or a Californian by mail)

7. Sunlight requirements

8. Indoor appropriate

9. Container size if any

10. Soil acidity requirements

11. Filter by live plant vs seed vs whatever

12. Planting time of year

ryebread777
2 replies
1d1h

This is an awesome list with many things I’d never thought of! Thanks for taking the time to write it out. Seems like requirements for the gardening user and the houseplant user vary pretty substantially!

ttyprintk
1 replies
21h29m

Aquatic might be its own section, really a freshwater fish tank section.

ryebread777
0 replies
21h26m

Ah yes, there is already a category for aquatic, but you're right that they should really have their own set of filters and everything else too. (foreground / background plant, needs CO2, water PH, etc.). Im wondering if there is a way to provide a tailored user experience based on what the user is interested in, but I feel that will explode in complexity.

chelmzy
2 replies
1d7h

Would it be possible to add a location filter for native ranges of the plants?

soared
0 replies
1d6h

For indoor plants, depending on where you live you may have near-zero native plants commonly sold. Native plants tend to make more sense for outdoors, as the indoor climate as closer to tropical-always rather then your real weather.

ryebread777
0 replies
1d7h

Ooh, I’ve actually been looking into this. It hasn’t been too heavily requested but to me it is a cool feature. I’m curious what you envision by location? Would it be by country? Or something more specific or broad?

rishikeshs
1 replies
1d1h

Why did you move away from django?

ryebread777
0 replies
1d1h

Still using Django, but now I’m using react for front end. This made it a lot easier for me to create a clean modern looking UI.

piva00
1 replies
1d7h

What a great idea! I'm also quite in love with keeping plants and have found similar issues on conflicting names, etc.

Don't have much feedback since I'm not in the USA, eagerly waiting for an international expansion to Europe :)) Good luck!

ryebread777
0 replies
1d7h

Sorry! I forgot to include a disclaimer that most of the stores are US based right now. I am excited to expand to different countries but there are a few difficult questions to figure out in terms of user experience. I’m hoping to nail the core functionality and then focus on expanding to other countries. Thanks for the comment!

newrotik
1 replies
1d7h

I have very recently published a mobile plant identification app (https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.hiddengard...).

It's the first mobile app I have ever written and I enjoyed the process quite a bit!

My main goal was to deliver better identification accuracy than similar apps.

However I also wanted to provide useful plant information along with the identification and naively thought that this would have had to be a solved problem - surely there would be some online DB with all plants data neatly organized (I'd be even happy to pay for it!), in particular plant care information - but alas!

ajnin
0 replies
1d7h

That begs the question ... How did you come up with that plant database ?

jones58
1 replies
1d6h

Any chance of a UK version? Based in London and love the UI of this :)

ryebread777
0 replies
1d6h

Thanks! I mentioned in another comment but definitely hoping to expand once I've nailed the fundamentals!

jihadjihad
1 replies
1d7h

This is really cool, congrats on shipping. I've had a hard time finding reliable plant information as well, especially since many sites focus only on indoor plants while others focus only on those you grow outside in a garden, etc. It's nice to be able to search for plants I have inside as well as outside.

Having a filter for the genus is a great idea too!

The search feels a little slow, and it's somewhat finicky: if I type in "ficus ginseng" I don't see a result, apparently because the title is "Ficus 'Ginseng'" so the single quotes are needed.

But I can see myself using this site! Nice work!

ryebread777
0 replies
1d7h

Ah, yes you are right about that. The search sucks right now. An even bigger issue is that search only matches in the scientific name but most people are entering common names. Yours is the first user feedback to mention it though so thank you for sharing! I will make it a higher priority to fix.

gerdesj
1 replies
22h16m

Great job. What about a dichotomous key (DK) for search as well as filters? Let's say you know quite a few attributes but not the name, you should be able to use a DK to home in on the plant. I note you are a data scientist so you'll know how best to mine the data to make that work. You will need quite a lot more attributes but those might be bought in from elsewhere.

ryebread777
0 replies
21h28m

Thank you! Cool idea, I was not familiar with this concept. I will look into what data exists for these.

fareesh
1 replies
1d5h

How does one map 6000 plants to 6000 products across other websites?

Is it done via some loose matching of keywords which is not verified by hand, or is there some kind of global identification system that is used by each of the sites?

Or is it done in collaboration with the sites?

ryebread777
0 replies
1d4h

The process is a combination of things. right now most of the work is done by a massive regex. I also do some manual labeling. Exploring some other solutions too. But accurate mappings are a high priority for the site!

contingencies
1 replies
22h18m

Hey, also a plant lover here. I also have experienced great frustration sourcing plants and pondered a similar platform. Haven't acted on it as too busy with existing projects. Issues not dealt with in your platform: plants with no known source should be hidden by default, shipping issues such as international and interstate restrictions on mailing plant material should be recognised, time and cost should be respected including currency exchange rates, and the options of growing from seed or spore should be in-scope.

If you want to grow it, my suggestion would be to use a social model, so allow people to store information about their own garden and then share a feed of events like "I planted this!" or "This flowered!" or "This reproduced!" or "I collected seeds!" to draw people to your platform. Sharing material and the use of endemic plants should be encouraged where possible, not just outright commercialism.

The gold standard today for accessible all-species info at the global level is iNaturalist (pulls in nice maps plus taxonomy plus Wikipedia, though unfortunately does not really delineate in the map between nominal natural range and current range). Not sure how you do it now but frankly it would be somewhat superfluous to attempt to reproduce such information independently, for example by maintaining your own image database.

Other things that can draw people to a site would include seasonally appropriate gardening tips (plant or fertilise or prune X now before Y season, check Z for A/B/C pest situation, clone P now, etc.), a relevant local events feed (which opens up potential travel revenue streams such as hotels, flights, group tours, etc.), and academic and publishing news in related areas.

Many of the nurseries have problems maintaining up to date stock lists. To commercialise, it may be useful to help them do so. To motivate them to get on the platform, you could for example allow parties to sign up for future purchases of crops not yet matured but with an estimate readiness date, thereby assisting the grower with cashflow and sales pipelining.

ryebread777
0 replies
20h55m

Thank you for your thoughtful response! I love your ideas. I will have to come back a few times to process everything but will add a few thoughts now.

Many science-oriented resources, such as iNaturalist, license content with creative commons licenses, but don't permit commercial applications. That prevents me from making use of many of them as part of my site. But in general my aim is also much different, so certainly don't see myself as competing. I want to help people actually obtain and enjoy the plants rather than just study them.

I think your tip about leveraging social media is excellent! I will brainstorm content that users can share out, like you describe. Probably a good starting point is a way to share your wishlist (or current collection).

Your idea about maintaining stock lists and allowing pre-purchasing of plants is really brilliant. I don't know much about the nursery space, but I will try to learn more and think about your idea and other options in the space. What you describe makes a lot of sense. I really appreciate your ideas.

coldtrait
1 replies
14h58m

Can I add missing plants?

ryebread777
0 replies
7h59m

There isn’t a way for users to add plants at the moment. Curious what plants you were looking for though. I can try to identify stores to partner with that have them.

chris_armstrong
1 replies
17h5m

I'd love to do something like this for Australian native plants. It seems like quite a lot of work though!

contingencies
0 replies
14h36m

I'm Aussie and a native plant society person. Will come along to your meeting next week and we can chat about it.

Exuma
1 replies
1d1h

nice... ive had this on my todo list to build for quite a long time, but you beat me to it.

ryebread777
0 replies
23h17m

Would love to hear how you envisioned it differently if you're down to share.

wly_cdgr
0 replies
1d2h

Very cool, thank you.

stephenitis
0 replies
20h16m

A cool feature would to be to show youtube search results and care guides that reference the plant in question.

Every page I open I've been going to youtube to check on videos of the plants

smusamashah
0 replies
1d7h

Nice to see it includes Airplants as well.

rlhf
0 replies
19h50m

It's really good to get this when you have pets at home. btw, I love the web design.

noashavit
0 replies
1d1h

This is great, thanks for feeding my addiction :-)

netrap
0 replies
1d6h

Many pictures missing. Search is not great, especially for non scientific names of plants. Like "frogfruit" doesn't find anything. Other than that it's great!!

majkinetor
0 replies
1d2h

It would be cool to add a sort of public plant wikipedia with info on care about a plant. I love to keep plants, but some are just hard to maintain right.

komali2
0 replies
19h19m

This is really cool! I love the clean design.

I'm a little confused though, the prices are showing in USD and not NTD, and for some reason all the stores are in some country called "The United States?" I don't live there.

;)

jilles
0 replies
1d5h

This is incredible! I can remove this app idea of my "app ideas"-list.

fjsooner
0 replies
22h57m

I think it’s funny, though clearly reasonable, but searching for either “poison ivy” or “poison oak” both return 0 results.

eclipticplane
0 replies
1d

Oh. Oh no. This is an extremely dangerous site for me to know about.

captainkrtek
0 replies
23h18m

This is really nice! Thanks for making this and sharing!

8mobile
0 replies
16h35m

hi, I like the idea but the quality and diversity of the photos is not much. I would also like to know the characteristics of the plant, whether it resists the cold or whether it needs to be watered often.