What does a four-color flower look like in one meter? Really?
On the Gobi desert in Africa, there is a small flower called Yimi. A flower has only four petals, and each petal has its own color: red, white, yellow and blue. Its uniqueness does not stop there. In the desert, usually only one huge plant can grow well, but only one. It usually takes five years to complete the interpenetration of rhizomes, and then accumulate nutrients bit by bit, and a four-color floret will not bloom until the spring of the sixth year. In fact, this extremely difficult-to-grow floret doesn't last long, and it will die with its mother plant in just two days. It blooms once every five years, and each flowering period is only two days. It will take five years to open in these two days! One meter is harder than the epiphyllum I know, and the living environment is worse. In order to keep moisture in the desert and bloom gorgeous flowers, one meter must spend five years deeply rooted in the sand. Thinking of the tenacious growth of one meter, I passed away in a hurry after blooming the beautiful flower of life/Amy blog/WP-content/blogs/1109/uploads/1840257752137660 _ small.jpg.