Shows a close up of the richmond birdwing butterfly

(1/8) Shows a close up of the richmond birdwing butterfly

Birdwing Butterfly Plant Pararistolochia praevenosa

(2/8) Birdwing Butterfly Plant Pararistolochia praevenosa By Poyt448 Peter Woodard [CC0] (Photo Credits)

Richmond Birdwing Vine, Brisbane Botanic Gardens, covering a fence

(3/8) Richmond Birdwing Vine, Brisbane Botanic Gardens, covering a fence

Richmond Birdwing Butterfly

(4/8) Richmond Birdwing Butterfly

Richmond Birdwing Vine, Brisbane Botanic Gardens

(5/8) Richmond Birdwing Vine, Brisbane Botanic Gardens

Leaf of the Richmond Birdwing Vine

(6/8) Leaf of the Richmond Birdwing Vine

Richmond Birdwing Vine For Sale

(7/8) Richmond Birdwing Vine For Sale

Richmond Birdwing Vine For Sale

(8/8) Richmond Birdwing Vine For Sale

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Richmond Birdwing Vine

Pararistolochia praevenosa
A large vine of temperate subtropical rainforests. The vine attracts one of the largest and most spectacular butterflies the Richmond Birdwing Butterfly which is considered an endangered species. This is the only food source for the catterpillars of this ... Read More

$23.90 ($4.90-$23.90 choose a size)

Click Choose above to view Specials

Specifications of Richmond Birdwing Vine

Preferred Climate SubtropicalLearn About Climate Zones

Grown From CuttingLearn About Propagation Methods

Max Height (when in the ground with good conditions) 2-5m

Plants required to Pollinate 1 (Self Pollinating)Learn about Pollination

Can it Handle Frosts? Sometimes

Amount of leaves in Winter? All Leaves (Evergreen)

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These plants are often purchased together. Also check plant information for suitability in your orchard.

Dwarf Mango - King Thai

$79.00 ($79.00-$79.00 choose a size)

A semi-dwarf tree making it ideal for backyards, it produces elongated fruits with a very small seed. Flesh is sweet, succulent, fibreless and aromatic with a slight tang. The fruits start out with green skin and ripen to yellow with pink-red blushed fruit. Compact, branching, slightly upright tree growing to 3-4m tall and 2-3m wide. Shows good resistance to anthracnose and black spot. The fruit of a clone of King Thai mango are sold commercially as Maha Bliss in Australian Markets.

Lychee - Kiamana

$69.00

Excellent backyard variety. Medium-sized, compact, rounded tree that usually matures fruit from mid- Dec. through Jan. Considered good bearing compared with most other cultivars, especially consistent in areas with warm winters. Its fruits are large, deep red, and 33-40 to a kilogram, with seeds that are not large in relation to the amount of flesh.

Plum - Gulf Ruby

$49.00

Juicy, yellow flesh, clingstone, large size if properly thinned, attractive red skin blush, resistant to bacterial spot. Very low chill 275 hrs. Pollinator Gulf Gold

Nectarine - Sunwright

$49.00

A yellow-fleshed nectarine to 150 hours chill. A semi -clingstone, oval fruit, small to medium size with attractive colour, (80 - 90% blush), slightly soft flesh, good flavour. Very early fruiting. Thin fruit to get good fruit size.

Dwarf Mulberry - Red Shahtoot

$49.00 ($29.00-$99.00 choose a size)

Much more compact in growth habit than the King White Shahtoot. These delicious sweet fruits can reach 10cm in length. Ideal for back yards and we consider it a must have fruit tree for the back yard. The best way to eat mulberries is fresh from the tree. If some should make it to the kitchen bench they make excellent pies, jams, wines and sauces. Multiple crops are possible by pruning directly after your first crop. Suitable for most regions of Australia, although it can be susceptible to damage from late frosts. The red shahtoot is ideal for growing in pots and containers due to it small growing habit and it is ideal for school gardens as it does not produce fruits that stain and the sweet fruits are very appealing to children. This variety is best suited to warm subtropical climates and does not perform well in temperate climate where it tends to drop their fruit.

Pecan - Mohawk (B) SP

$39.00 ($19.75-$39.00 choose a size)

Large nuts similar to Mahan. Thin shell of attractive appearance. Kernel can exceed 60% of weight of the entire nut. Separates easily from shell; high quality, matures early. Vigorous and hardy tree, prolific bearer.

Richmond Birdwing Vine Reviews & Tips

Star Rating

Nick
★★★★★ 2months ago

BANORA POINT, NSW

Richmond Birdwing Vine

I left them inside my house in their original small tubes wrapped in plastic for a few weeks (and poured some water through a hole I made in the plastic), then repotted the vines into larger pots with premium potting mix and put them in an outdoor shady spot for several more weeks. They're thriving! I'll put them in the ground in a shady spot shortly to grow up some palm trees, so fingers crossed...

Ross
★★★★★ 1y ago

CURL CURL, NSW

Richmond Birdwing Vine

Quick growing and robust plant

Norm
★★★★★ 1y ago

CORNUBIA, QLD

Richmond Birdwing Vine

Healthy plants. Thank you. Fingers crossed. They are fussy.

Marion
★★★★★ 1y ago

EAST TOOWOOMBA, QLD

Richmond Birdwing Vine

Great strong plants that have settled in well.

Jenny
★★★★★ 1y ago

KEPERRA, QLD

Richmond Birdwing Vine

I purchased this plant for the Richmond Butterfly as I have native bees and love to see creatures in my garden. At this stage the vine is just establishing it self but I love to watch it extend up my trellis

kevin
★★★★★ 4y ago

coochiemudlo island, qld, Australia

Richmond Birdwing Vine

Flourishing and running up a yellow stringy bark with a rope loosley spiraling to give the vine some minimal purchase. Drip fed water for ten minutes in morning + deep coarse bark mulch. First flowers after three years. ocasional native plant food.

Jj King
8y ago

Lennox Head, NSW, Australia

Richmond Birdwing Vine

We planted one about 6 months ago. It's now spring and is about 2 meters tall. We've lead it up via twine to a palm tree. It seems very happy but we're yet to see any flowers or butterflies. Hopefully over the summer.

Emma1
★★★ 14y ago

Bardon, Qld, Australia

Bought this vine to grow up a tree to give it a more tropical look and do my bit for the local rare butterfly. Needs water occasionally. Growth has been slow.

Simon1
★★★★ 15y ago

Highgate Hill, QLD, Australia

Planted in ground. Plant is a little more straggly than I expected.  The flowers have just started. Not really noticable, but it was planted for environmental reasons, to assist with getting birdwing butterflies back into the area.I have not seen any ...

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