An instigator came through for us , thank you sir for your patronage
P.i Nature Nectars
Contact information, map and directions, contact form, opening hours, services, ratings, photos, videos and announcements from P.i Nature Nectars, 3 Olaka Street, off Abacha road, GRA Phase 2, Port Harcourt.
We produce and Fruit juice, smoothies, healthy snacks, fruits salad, and also make Eco-friendly products from Bamboo, rattan, Wood, clay and raffia craft home, Office, restaurant our products are
Bamboo craft
Rattan crafts
wood craft
Raffia craft
And Veronica daughters came through for us at New yam festival , thank you for your Patronqge Na
Thank you Maureen The Order room for your Patronage at exhibition
We really want to appreciate every one that came through for us this weekend, thank you all for your Patronage.
This is what we do as a business, please we are open for your Patronage
We are here to appreciate all our customers and clients that came through for us at Highlife Legendary Concert and award night thank you for patronising our brand it was massive.
05/09/2025
Today we will be at Highlife Legendary Concert and Award night . Come through for us this holiday
The food Fusion was a blast and we are here to say thank you to everyone that patronized our products we are grateful
16/06/2025
Good morning. 🌄
Let your choices today flow from heritage. Let them nourish those who come after you.
🌿 What sustainable habit connects you to your roots?
12/06/2025
Adaobi was a bride in a coastal town where traditions ran deep.
For her wedding, her aunts didn’t gift her gold, they gifted her a raffia bag. Inside it: a white wrapper, scented herbs, and a calabash cup.
The bag had been passed down four generations. Each bride added a charm to the handle: a bead, a shell, or a stitch. Adaobi added a moon-shaped bead, to remind her of her mother’s lullabies.
When she passed it to her daughter, the bag had become more than woven strands. It had become a love song.
What would you place in a raffia bag if you were gifting tradition?
12/06/2025
In the heart of a small village in Eastern Nigeria, a young boy named Somto watched his mother carve a flat plate from mahogany.
It wasn’t for show, it was to serve yam porridge at the village festival.
The plate, warm from the sun, carried the aroma of stew and pride. After the festival, it wasn’t thrown away, it was rinsed, sun-dried, and stored for next year.
Today, we make wooden plates like Somto’s mother did. But now, we send them across Nigeria and beyond, to anyone who wants to dine with nature.
🍽️ Would you eat from a plate made with memory and meaning?
Click here to claim your Sponsored Listing.
Location
Telephone
Website
Address
Port Harcourt