May 2008
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It’s that time of year: The rain is history, and plants everywhere are bursting into bloom. So why not do something exotic this season with your bare windowsill or that empty patch of earth? A visit to any of these nurseries—which sell far more than spider plants and daffodils—will provide all the inspiration you need to get some dirt under your fingernails.
Exotic plants and palms
When Flora Grubb and Saul Nadler ditched their trailer on Guerrero Street for a 28,000-square-foot property in Bayview last May, they invited their beloved neighbor Ritual Coffee Roasters along. Meet San Francisco’s exotic-plants empire, Flora Grubb Gardens, where you’ll find vegetation (agaves, cussonia, and “Afterdark,” to name a few) that mainstream nurseries don’t carry. And if you’re in the market for a palm tree, resident palm pilot Jason Dewees can help you navigate the 50 or so varieties the shop carries. Check its website for in-house events and discussions—the booze is often free (the coffee never is), the people are nice, and the gardening tips are priceless. 1634 Jerrold Ave., S.F., 415-626-7256, floragrubb.com
Orchids
You won’t see a sign for “ePlantWorld” as you head down 92 West toward Half Moon Bay. Instead, after cruising past several greenhouses, plant shops, and roadside veggie vendors, keep an eye out for the giant red “Orchids Sale” sign. Step inside the muggy greenhouse to join enthusiasts perusing two football fields’ worth of orchids, from phalaenopsis to cymbidiums, cattleyas to brassias, all available for $3–32. Jong Inn Jun, the owner of ePlantWorld, cultivates most of the flowers himself. He’s been at this location since 2006, and business is so good, he’s opening a new shop, to be called Orchidholic, at the San Francisco Flower Mart this summer. 12511 San Mateo Rd., Half Moon Bay, 650-238-8130
Organic fruits and veggies
From the street, this little slice of Eden looks like a community garden, but inside Spiral Gardens’ metal front gates, it’s more like an edible jungle. The retail nursery specializes in “useful plants”—such as vegetable seedlings, fruit trees, berry bushes, and culinary and medicinal herbs—as well as plants that nurture bees, butterflies, and hummingbirds. Almost everything is grown on-site according to strict organic standards, and sold at prices that are, um, dirt cheap. The proceeds
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