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How
To Buy Plants Locally
For the beginning gardener
the best source for healthy plants and sound advice is your nearby
full service plant nursery or garden center. They stock a wide variety
of plants suitable for your particular climate and location and
(hopefully) employ experienced and qualified personnel. Often these
people have special degrees in horticulture so the novice can feel
secure in receiving the best advice on how to select and care for
their plants.
The nursery you choose
should be clean and orderly, plants should be labeled and priced,
and should be arranged in groups according to type: perennials,
annuals, shrubs, trees, etc. In addition, aisles should be wide
enough to permit the use of a cart, which should be readily available.
Look for a "professional" approach to merchandising; special
displays of plants on sale or of seasonal interest, attractive groupings
of plants for color and texture; a basic sense of style to the operation.
And, always, there should be an employee on hand to offer assistance
and advice when needed.
Gardeners, on the whole,
are a generous and friendly bunch. If you're new to your community
or just wanting to get started with a small container garden, pick
out the prettiest garden in your neighborhood, introduce yourself
to the owner and ask for recommendations on where to shop for plants
and garden supplies. Newspaper ads can also be of help, and driving
around from one nursery to the next may give you an indication of
which one is most appealing to you.
Also, the huge garden
or builders' supply warehouses are excellent for tools, equipment,
fertilizers, planting mixes, containers and all sorts of accessories
for the gardener, and will usually sell for a little less than a
local nursery due to turnover, display space and volume.
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