San Diego Union-Tribune

BUTTERFLY FARMS IN ENCINITAS WILL CARRY ON

Solana Beach resident and co-founder Tom Merriman was found slain on Jan. 1

- BY PAM KRAGEN pam.kragen@sduniontri­bune.com

ENCINITAS

Monday would have been Tom Merriman’s first day back at work at Butterf ly Farms. Instead, the nearly 8year-old education and research nonprofit in Encinitas is preparing to move forward without its co-founder and president.

Merriman, 64, was found dead on Jan. 1 inside the Solana Beach home of Jade Sasha Janks, 37, who has been jailed on suspicion of first-degree murder. Deputies had gone to the address on Nardo Avenue to check on a man’s welfare. Because of the circumstan­ces in which they found Merriman’s body, the case is being investigat­ed as a homicide. Janks’ arraignmen­t date has not been announced.

Butterfly Farms CEO Pat Flanagan said he was stunned by the news, which he learned in a phone call from one of Merriman’s brothers. Flanagan said he had been exchanging texts and emails last week with Merriman about his plan to return to work this week, after taking time off to recuperate from injuries he suffered after eye surgery in December.

“I was thinking how nice it would be to have him back when I got the news. It’s such a shock,” said Flanagan, who co-founded the half-acre farm project with Merriman in spring 2013. “But we will move forward. Tom and I talked about how we wanted this to be a legacy program. The work we do is important and it grows more important every year. So we will carry on. That’s what Tom would want. It would be a huge insult to Tom not to do that.”

Flanagan said he met Merriman in 2011 when they both leased nursery space on the same property in Vista and they decided to combine their businesses. At first, they were growing and selling palm trees but found it unfulfilli­ng. Then, over beers by a campfire one night, they hatched the idea of instead building a butterf ly vivarium and selling the pollinator plants that attract butterflie­s.

To learn about the f lying creatures, the men recruited Vista lepidopter­ist David Marriott, who founded the Monarch Program, a nonprofit that tracked the migration of monarch butterf lies and ran a vivarium in Encinitas until mid-2013. Marriott, who died a few years ago, taught Flanagan and Merriman how to build and maintain a vivarium and with his help they opened Butterfly Farms in spring 2013. Two years later, the project moved to its present location at 441 Saxony Road in Encinitas.

Flanagan said Merriman was the day-to-day operations manager of Butterfly Farms, but also its heart and soul.

“He was really good at patiently helping people,” Merriman said. “Our customers take a lot more time because they have a lot of questions and he was always willing to take however long they needed to listen and make sure they had everything they needed to start their own butterfly gardens.”

Flanagan said that during butterf ly season each year — which runs from April through November — the halfacre attraction hosts a couple hundred visitors every day, most of them student groups from San Diego County schools. And during the summer months, more than 50,000 visitors toured the Butterfly Farms exhibit each year at the San Diego County Fair. The Encinitas property includes a walk-through vivarium with live butterf lies and a boutique nursery that sells several pesticide-free varieties of butterf ly-attracting plants, including native and tropical species of milkweed for monarchs.

Although the pandemic took a big bite out of revenues with the cancellati­on of all student field trips, Flanagan said he and Merriman had an unexpected­ly good year in 2020. Because so many people were homebound, their interest in backyard gardening and butterf ly plants exploded. The partners were also at work on plans to expand their milkweed production and to build a second vivarium project at The Farm in Poway, a recently approved housing developmen­t.

Flanagan said surviving a tough year and emerging with big projects ahead made it an especially heartbreak­ing time to lose his business partner and friend.

“It’s an exciting time,” Flanagan said. “After years of really toiling seven days a week, 365 days a year, we really came of age this year and now he’s gone.”

Because butterfly season ends in November, Merriman had arranged to take time off to undergo long-planned laser eye surgery on Dec. 1. But in the days following the surgery, Merriman told Flanagan he suffered several falls after the surgery that led to cracked ribs, two concussion­s and facial injuries that prolonged his time away from work.

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Tom Merriman

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