Windsor man selling the 'crown jewel of plants' for $2K on Facebook - Action News
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Windsor man selling the 'crown jewel of plants' for $2K on Facebook

A pandemic hobby may just pay off in a big way for one Windsor, Ont. plant enthusiast who took a riskon a rare plant species.

Ardell Gough listed the monstera albo on Facebook Marketplace for $2,000

Ardell Gough's green thumb helped him grow this Monstera Albo

2 years ago
Duration 0:38
Gough bought a clipping of a Monstera Albo in July last year. He's now selling the plant for a couple thousand dollars

A pandemic hobby may just pay off in a big way for one Windsor, Ont., plant enthusiast who took a risk on a rare plant species.

Ardell Goughsaid he first started out buying plants in March of 2021with a few succulents and an aloe vera but the habit quickly ballooned.

"$200 later I have all these house plants and then after a few tripsI have like 60 house plants --my apartment's a jungle [and] to water them it's taking me two to three hours," he said.

But Gough decided to focus his efforts on one plant afterlearning about the monsteraalbo online. It's a plant he said isconsidered the "crown jewel of plants."

Smiling man stands behind plant.
Ardell Gough says he spent a few hundred bucks on a clipping to grow this monstera albo. (Jennifer La Grassa/CBC)

"I just kind of decided I was going to learn how to grow these plants and I was going to focus on this plant," he said.

"One really, really good plant."

The plant is highly coveted because of a genetic mutation in its leaves that causes white colouringas well as the fact that it doesn't grow from a seed but rather from a clipping.

"The supply will always be limited," he said.

Gough spent a few hundred dollars for one of those clippings which was shipped from Toronto last summer a risky moveas the plants can revert back to being just green.

"It doesn't always successfully propagate."

Up for sale

Goughsaid the soil mix, lighting,humidity, and temperatureareall very important to nurturing a healthy plant. Today the plant has 15leaves. With a newborn baby at home, he'slisted the plant on Facebook Marketplace for $2,000.

He said while he does have a few offers and onepotential buyer, many are confused.

"I get a lot of messages saying like, 'Is that a mistake?' or 'There's no way you can justify that,'" he said.

Drew Beaudoin, a former plant expert at Colasanti's Tropical Gardens, told the CBC that the price was just right.

"Most people's first reaction is'Whoa, that's way too much,'" Beaudoin said.

Man sits with plants around him.
Drew Beaudoin says the $2,000 price tag Gough has put on the plant is fair. (Jennifer La Grassa)

"That's a lot of money, but then most people seem to stop and think about it, think about how hard it is to find, grow, take care ofand all that, and then kind of go 'Yeah that makes sense.'

I think it's a perfectly fair price.I don't know if anyone will buy it here."

Gough said he's selling the plantbecause of the fact that he has a newborn son.

"It takes up a lot of space, it takes a lot of work and my life has taken on a whole new meaning," he said.

"Plants have kind of taken a back seat."

With files from Jennifer La Grassa

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