Okay, there’s a foot of new snow on the ground, but a couple days ago I saw a few bits of green poking through the frozen tundra. Tulips, I think. The other bits of green were the garden catalogs that have started to propagate in the mailbox.
So have any of you folks had any experiences, good or bad, with mail order garden companies?
I know Breck’s is good, but bulbs are easy.
How about the others? Gurney’s? Spring Hill? Ever get cuttings or rose bushes in the mail? How’d they do?
Burpee seeds are about the only thing I’ve ordered through the mail that has ever ended up in my garden.
I prefer to eyeball cuttings and seedlings myself prior to purchase.
“Though I hate 'em, I’ll defend to my death your right to use smilies.”
Forward deployed until 18AUG00
ChiefScott’s right about fingering the goods yourself.
But I’ve ordered from, and had great success with, Whiteflower Farm in Connecticut.
It’s a real lace-curtain nursery, and markets itself to the nabobs in Newport, Marblehead, and Northeast Harbor. If you can prove your provenance back to the MAYFLOWER, they’ll put you on their mailing list.
A friend also once sent me a heirloom rosebush from a nursery in South Carolina…it’s by far the healthiest rose in my garden, producing many more blooms than any of the roses I’ve chosen personally.
I ordered 3 trees from the Michigan Bulb co. 2 years ago. I could only use 1, so I gave the others to a neighbor. Hers died immediately, mine is now 10 ft. tall or so. To be fair, they were only sticks with roots when I got them, and other stuff I’ve bought had been hit or miss. The strawberrys are doing great, the blueberry bush died. Flowers are about 50/50, but ask me in the spring when I see how many of the bulbs I got last year sprout AND BLOOM this year.
I’ve had great luck with anything from Jackson & Perkins (mostly roses). I’ve had a lot of things from there and they have all done well immediately. (They are a bit more expensive than some other catalogue companies.)
My rule of thumb after about ten years of experimentation with different plant and seed catalogue companies is this: if the catalogue is very elegant and obviously expensive to produce, the things I’ve ordered have done very well, even with casual care, in some cases. The catalogues that have cheaper products and are on cheap paper with flimsy covers have usually sent me plants that either died or took years to get going, even with meticulous care. This is not true without exception, but close enough.
Big exception: The cheapest catalogue I’ve ever seen is the Abundant Life Seed Foundation’s catalogue and yet, their stuff does wonderfully well. They have a lot of heirloom and rare seeds and their care advice is excellent.
FWIW, I’ve had miserable luck with Michigan Bulb company. I usually buy from local nurseries, but succumbed to ugly Catalog Lust and lived to regret it.
Actually some of the best buys have been from the fall plant sale from the local Parks Dept.; the proceeds support the botanical center. The plants are cheap and adapted to the soil and climate. It’s been a great way to fill in lillies, hostas, etc. at minimal cost.
Nonetheless, I’m grateful for a few of the tips here. There are some heirloom things and specific herb varieties that I just can’t buy locally. Guess there isn’t enough market for them.
Thanks for the OP. Glad to know I’m not the only one with a raging case of spring fever. Of course we have a foot of snow on the ground, so that just compounds the fracture. But I’m toying with the seed starting thing, and lusting for vine ripened tomatoes.
My green thumb has been itching lately as well. Though, in the past year I’ve acquired three goats, so have to be more careful what/where I plant. I love em, but their main MO is “Can I eat it???”
For herb plants and seeds, Richter’s is wonderful! Great catalog, and careful packing that gets the plants to you in good shape. http://www.richters.com
Order the print catalog, it’s a wellspring of information.
Spring Hill is good; if you have cable you can order Spring Hill stuff from QVC (or at www.qvc.com)..) Jackson & Perkins is an excellent source for plants, especially roses. Parks Seed Company and their alterego, Wayside Gardens (for live plants) are quite good. Gurneys I haven’t ordered too much stuff from, but don’t have anything bad to report. Burpee seeds are supposed to be good as well.