How to Choose the Best Nursery and Plants for Your Landscaping

When it comes to buying new landscaping shrubbery, flowers, trees and other such greenery, you need to be very careful and exercise caution about the business you choose and the plants themselves. This is because it's often harder to return a plant or tree that won't thrive or that turns out to be diseased or damaged, than it is to return a defective landscaping tool! Note a few tips for choosing the right nursery and then also the best plants for your landscaping needs.

Choosing a reputable business

You can often save money by buying your nursery supplies and greenery from a smaller company or private grower, but you still want to ensure that their business is reputable. Check if they're registered with a local trade authority, as this better enables customers to register or file complaints when needed. Research their history online and with that registry, and see if there have been such complaints, if they've lost their license before and the like. This will tell you if you can trust that business to only sell quality products.

Look at the health of the leaves

Very often nurseries will put their best flowering plants out front, as these easily catch the eyes of customers. However, plants will usually use all their moisture and nutrition to create blooms during the right season, and these blossoms may not tell you much about the actual health of the plant itself. Check the leaves and stems for dryness, brown or blotchy spots, cracks in the stem, signs of pest infestation such as holes in the leaves and other indications that this is a poor-quality plant. Don't be impressed by the flowers alone, but look at the rest of the plant for its overall health when choosing.

Check maturity information

When choosing plants, note the tags or other indicators that tell you the maturity information, meaning how large the plant will grow once it is mature. Compare this to the plant itself. Does it seem undersized? This might indicate it's not thriving very well and may die off soon after replanting. The product information will usually also tell you the colour and size of the leaves or thickness of a tree trunk to expect, and compare these as well. Are the leaves undersized or pale, or is a tree trunk seemingly thin? Always look for mature plants that are fully grown and have all the characteristics you would expect from a thriving, healthy plant.

To begin your search for a good nursery, check out one like Din San Nursery.


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