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THE
ADVENTUROUS GARDENER: Where to Buy the Best Plants in New England is
dedicated to our fellow gardeners. It is meant to help you
find good, regionally grown plants for your garden. We hope
you will use this as a travel companion, whether in search
of particular plants or a horticultural romp through New
England. We hope you will consult this guide when you are
dreaming and planning your garden.
This
book is for venturesome gardeners, weekend gardeners,
enthusiasts, connoisseurs,
urban gardeners, variegated-foliage nuts, garden designers,
and people with green thumbs. It is for smart gardeners who
know that the best plants are usually local plants, grown
within 100
miles of their
garden. It is for
garden tourists who enjoy visiting nurseries and display
gardens while traveling the byways of New England. It is for
armchair gardeners who savor reading garden catalogs on cold
winter nights. It is for gardeners who love the historical
landscape of New England and want to reward and encourage
farmers seeking viable agricultural uses for its farmland.
It is for cold-climate gardeners who love exotic new plants
and want to know where to find them in New England.
This
book offers help in finding regional sources for garden
plants you may be looking for, whether native wildflowers,
Chinese tree peonies, African violets, or plants that look
good in winter. We do not pretend to proclaim the “best”
sources for any particular plant, beyond some personal
recommendations. Though we have great respect for reputable
commercial garden centers, most are well advertised and
already known to local gardeners; instead, our focus has
been on growers of plants that can’t be found in garden
centers—though we have included a few garden centers we
think are standouts.
Being
horticultural amateurs, not professionals, we had much to
learn in order to write this book, and we admit to some
outright prejudices. We prefer nurseries that strive for
excellence and sell healthy, well-selected plants that are
regionally adapted to New England. We prefer establishments
that grow their own plants, because this normally produces a
stronger, healthier plant than trucked-in stock or the
force-fed plugs of the nursery industry. We seek
interesting, unusual, and beautiful varieties of ornamental
plants. We want plants that are correctly labeled. We like
responsible pest management and organic growing practices.
We love eloquent nursery catalogs that are fun to read. We
admire hybridizers and nurserymen who expand our
consciousness about what can be grown in a cold-climate
garden. We
oppose wild-collecting of native plants, rare or not. We
have a weakness for family farms and adventurous spirits. We
find the eccentricities of New England growers to be
endearing. We prefer nurseries and specialty growers that
contribute to preserving the rural landscape of New England.
We have omitted any place where the plants are on drugs and
you can smell chemical fertilizer from the driveway.
We prefer
nurseries that sell well-grown, unusual, and beautiful
plants that are regionally adapted to New England. We prefer
those that grow their own plants and label them correctly.
We like organic farming and responsible pest management. We
love eloquent nursery catalogs that are fun to read. We
admire hybridizers and nurserymen who expand our
consciousness about what we can grow in a cold-climate
garden. We love to see nurseries and farms that are finding
ways to preserve the rural landscape of New England. Above
all, we have looked for good plants.
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