Let me help you find a nursery in the Southern California & Los Angeles areas.

A mossy fountain at Laguna Nursery
This is a difficult post to write because most nurseries are special in some way. Every community needs and deserves a generalized “garden center” for obvious reasons (especially since Target has closed all of theirs — yea!). So I’m not necessarily talking about service, selection or price. With destination nurseries something more indefinable is usually in play, starting with the passion of the owner. Most of the nursery men and women I’ve met love what they do — which is lucky for us in this harsh economic climate. But it is much harder to specialize because it cuts down on clientele. So, need Australian plants? Go to Jo O’Connell’s Australian Native Plants Nursery in Ojai. Jo provides Australian plants to the Huntington Botanical Gardens, among many others. Want your roses grown locally and acclimatized — Otto and Sons in Fillmore has an enormous selection. How about a custom topiary spelling out your name? Get it at Eden Nursery in Orange County. Two nurseries that specialize in jaw dropping fountains, planter arrangements, orchids, garden furniture and accessories: Laguna Nursery in Orange County and Rolling Greens Nursery in Culver City. Upland Nursery in Orange County has 350 varieties of plumeria. Does your spouse want to see a phenomenal car collection while you shop for petunias? The only place for that is Simpson’S Garden Nursery in San Diego County. Also in San Diego County: Botanical Partners with every bamboo imaginable, and Jungle Music for collector’s palms. The owners of these nurseries (Ralph Evans and Phil Bergman, respectively) will give you help in deciding what will do best in your garden — they want you to succeed and come back for more. Of course, that is true of all nurseries, large and small, general or specialized.
I have a “Destination Nursery” listing at the bottom of my categories on Socalnurseryplants.com. For more information on each nursery, go to the category for that nursery.
This yummy Orange County nursery is bursting at the seams with old-fashioned flowers and romantic heirloom varieties. A smaller scale enterprise, it is lovingly tended by sisters Jayme and Stacy Cox, and their mom Jane Cox. A brick footpath winds through a tapestry of blooms, vines, fountains, arbors and statuary. Beatrix Potter would have been right at home here. Think wisteria, rare poppies, tons of antique roses. I noticed “bleeding hearts”, a plant that I remember from my grandmother’s garden in Wisconsin. If you are looking for English garden plants this nursery is well worth a drive — it’s one stop shopping. A shipment of Annie’s Annuals arrived April 1. Be sure to Mapquest or call for directions — access can be tricky.