Vitavia Ida 1300... buckle up!
I bought the Vitavia Ida 1300 thinking I was getting a simple, sleek little greenhouse. Instead, I discovered an ancient rite of passage.
First, before you even get to the actual instructions, the company has thoughtfully produced a video to explain… how to read the instructions. That’s right - a tutorial for the tutorial. I half expected the next video to be “How to Sit Down Comfortably Before Watching Instructional Videos.” It’s like they knew the instructions were a bit of an interpretive dance and wanted to ease you into the experience.
Then came the hardware - the noble nuts and bolts. Except these nuts and bolts apparently failed basic “being nuts and bolts” school. The threads seemed to be in some kind of non-Euclidean geometry where screwing them together requires a mix of brute force, despair, and an irrational belief in magic. I’ve had IKEA furniture from the ‘90s with better metallurgy. By the end, I’d developed forearms like Popeye and a new respect for professional blacksmiths.
The funny part? Once it’s finally standing, the Vitavia Ida 1300 is a nice greenhouse. It’s pretty sturdy, compact, and looks good. They’re so close to having a great product - they just need to give the bolts a promotion from “ornamental” to “functional” and rewrite the instructions so they don’t require a prequel film.
In conclusion:
Buy if you want a nice little greenhouse and an ego-challenging weekend project.
Avoid if you thought “assembly” meant using tools rather than reinventing them.
Bonus: You’ll leave the process with a newfound talent for creative swearing in three languages.
Overall one star for the greenhouse, one for the workout, and one for the in retrospect comedic value.








