Behind a fence in a residential pocket of Bellbird Park, near Ipswich, this is a one-woman operation devoted entirely to cacti and succulents. It runs from the home block where the plants are grown, dried, checked and packed by hand, which explains the particular rhythm of the place: open only Monday to Friday, one till five, with a buzzer on the fence to announce visitors, and weekends reserved by appointment because family and the sheer volume of solo work come first. There's no pretence of slickness here, and no showroom gloss — just the practical business of raising desert plants in a Queensland backyard and sending them, bare-rooted and paper-wrapped, around the country each week. The FAQ pages read like notes from someone who has learned every hard lesson of mail-order horticulture: about customs certificates for Western Australia, the Northern Territory and Tasmania, about Australia Post's handling of live parcels, about payment processing times and the two days needed to dry plants before they travel. It's a nursery built on specialisation rather than scale — cacti and succulents only — and on the kind of close, hands-on attention that only a small, independent grower still measuring stock in individual pots can really offer.