Posts Tagged ‘topiary’

Otto and Sons rose nursery in Ventura County
Nursery geek — that would be me. I’m proud of it too –gave me the idea for SoCalNurseryPlants.com! Over the last year I’ve visited almost every nursery out of the 141 nurseries on my website. I plan to see them all. The list below is just for fun; feel free to contact me and add to it! Or you can add a comment that will be seen by thousands of readers.
In no particular order, nurseries that are the:
- Oldest : As far as I can tell, that would be Mission Hills Nursery (100+ years), in the San Diego section, followed by Bellefontaine Nursery (70+ years) and San Gabriel Nursery (80+ years), both in the East Valley section.
- Most well known: Roger’s Gardens in Newport Beach.
- Biggest: My guess is Simpson’s Garden Town Nursery @ 25 acres –also includes a car museum; in the San Diego section.
- Smallest: Laguna Hills Nursery, because Gary Matouska is selling out of his house: go to .
- Most unique: Eden Topiary Nursery: mostly topiary, and M and M Nursery: miniature and railroad enthusiasts, both in the Orange County section.
- Most specialized: Otto and Sons for all things rose, in the Ventura section and Nuccio’s Nurseries for camelias and azealias (East Valley).
- Nursery with the most varieties of any one plant: Westerlay Orchids: all orchids — in the Ventura section; Upland Nursery has over 350 varieties of plumeria; in the Orange County section.
- Number of nurseries (that I have been able to locate) in each county/area: Ventura — 13, East valley– 20, West Valley — 8, Malibu — 3, Los Angeles — 16 (does not include branches of Armstrong and Anawalt — they are counted once), South Bay — 13, Orange County — 22, San Diego County — 21.
- My favorite nursery: I’ll never tell; what’s yours? Tell me why and I’ll put it in a post!
FYI: I’m very fortunate to be an attendee and a vendor at the Pacific Horticulture Symposium September 23 — 26 at the Los Angeles Arboretum in Arcadia, CA. Titled Gardening under the Mediterranean Skies VIII: Style and Whimsey in the Sustainable Garden, this symposium is packed with informative talks, workshops and garden tours. I will be sharing my experiences and photos in the coming weeks. There is still some last minute space; if you are interested contact Susi Torre-Bueno @ (760) 295‑2173 (after 9⁄21 reach her at (619) 977‑0584) or go to the website @

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.



