Britain’s 30-year-old indoor gardening creator Le Britton (Tony Le-Britton) recently turned his living room into a greenhouse, cultivating rare species from around the world, including a plant with a leaf market price of up to 12,000 pounds (about $16,000).
The British news network Mirror (Mirror) reported that Le-Britton grew plants, including one that had been found to be extinct species. He earned tens of thousands of pounds for himself by peddling these rare species.
LeBreton revealed that his most expensive plant collection is Rhaphidophora Tetrasperma Variegata: “Monochromatic Rhaphidophora is common in supermarkets and gardens, but my version is the result of a genetic mutation, and the markings on the leaves are the only ones in the world.
Lebreton said he has received three pre-orders for the leaves, each priced at £12,000, and many customers have contacted him, “It’s like planting a money tree.
Lebreton also grows the once-extinct Begonia Chlorosticta and the unrecorded Monastera sp Bolivia, which he acquired from a plant collector in Austria and “grew from a small stem to a large one.
LeBreton says his grandparents used to take him for walks in their garden when he was a child, thus fostering his passion for plants. For more than 20 years he has grown hundreds of plants in two rooms, and although he has never formally studied plants, his practical experience from childhood has made him a professional.
LeBreton enjoys working in the greenhouse every day and regularly posts photos to his 33,000 followers on social media platforms, and he also owns his own brand, Not Another Jungle.
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