fossiliferous
Sapling
Hi all, I currently live about an hour from McMinnville, Tennessee, which bills itself as the “Nursery Capital of the World.”
There are vastly more nurseries down there than I could visit in a single day... around 300 total! I know many of them won’t be great to work with and are meant for those looking to buy in bulk for landscaping. Most likely don’t even have an online presence. If you’ve ever been there, there are just miles and miles of nurseries.
My plan is to find ones that are billing themselves as open to the public. If they have an online presence I will likely call or message ahead and ask if they have ugly or bent things, clearance, a discard pile that hasn’t been burned lately... lol. I plan to just tell them exactly what I’m looking for. Maybe this will cut down on frustration and wasted time. I’ve already located a few based on what they’re selling online, like on Etsy and Ebay, so I know of places growing some types I want. I also don’t want to assume anything about their taking visitors in the midst of social distancing. (If everything is outdoors and close quarters aren’t required for payment, it doesn’t seem risky to me but I want to check.)
Even if I don’t find a nice cheap discard tree, it’s always nice to save a little money by not having to pay shipping on “normal” trees and save them the stress of being put through the postal system.
I saw one other thread from four years ago where somebody posted about McMinnville and it seemed like the whole idea didn’t really go anywhere.
My plan is to take a lot of pictures and take a lot of notes, and report back so that hopefully my findings will be of use to any other members who find themselves in McMinnville looking for interesting trees. If my first attempt is an utter flop, well, I can always go back next time I have a day off and childcare. If it’s a pretty successful adventure though, I may make some kind of guide.
Do you have any tips for making the most of a nursery field trip day?
I’m most interested in the non-leafy parts of trees, so is it OK if I go soon in the winter season? I guess it will be hard to tell if anything is literally dead, but is there any other reason *not* to go soon?
Or is this all just a terrible idea?
Brief note to clarify what I personally am looking for- I am new to bonsai, although I’m stepping into an interest that goes back to childhood. With my own young children at home and lots of things going on, I would like some weird, rough, pre-bonsai things to put in the ground to thicken. I think 5ish years from now I will be really grateful for anything I got and left alone for a while so it could grow. I’m already kicking myself for not getting into bonsai four or five years ago when I first halfway considered it.
I want native trees that tend to bonsai well. I also have non-native interests though. I really love Japanese maples but own zero. For the time being I don’t want anything that can’t live outside here, approximately 7a hardiness zone. Ginkgo is my favorite tree. Hunting online for small ginkgo trees for sale was how I ran across some of the McMinnville options and started thinking about planning a trip.
There are vastly more nurseries down there than I could visit in a single day... around 300 total! I know many of them won’t be great to work with and are meant for those looking to buy in bulk for landscaping. Most likely don’t even have an online presence. If you’ve ever been there, there are just miles and miles of nurseries.
My plan is to find ones that are billing themselves as open to the public. If they have an online presence I will likely call or message ahead and ask if they have ugly or bent things, clearance, a discard pile that hasn’t been burned lately... lol. I plan to just tell them exactly what I’m looking for. Maybe this will cut down on frustration and wasted time. I’ve already located a few based on what they’re selling online, like on Etsy and Ebay, so I know of places growing some types I want. I also don’t want to assume anything about their taking visitors in the midst of social distancing. (If everything is outdoors and close quarters aren’t required for payment, it doesn’t seem risky to me but I want to check.)
Even if I don’t find a nice cheap discard tree, it’s always nice to save a little money by not having to pay shipping on “normal” trees and save them the stress of being put through the postal system.
I saw one other thread from four years ago where somebody posted about McMinnville and it seemed like the whole idea didn’t really go anywhere.
My plan is to take a lot of pictures and take a lot of notes, and report back so that hopefully my findings will be of use to any other members who find themselves in McMinnville looking for interesting trees. If my first attempt is an utter flop, well, I can always go back next time I have a day off and childcare. If it’s a pretty successful adventure though, I may make some kind of guide.
Do you have any tips for making the most of a nursery field trip day?
I’m most interested in the non-leafy parts of trees, so is it OK if I go soon in the winter season? I guess it will be hard to tell if anything is literally dead, but is there any other reason *not* to go soon?
Or is this all just a terrible idea?
Brief note to clarify what I personally am looking for- I am new to bonsai, although I’m stepping into an interest that goes back to childhood. With my own young children at home and lots of things going on, I would like some weird, rough, pre-bonsai things to put in the ground to thicken. I think 5ish years from now I will be really grateful for anything I got and left alone for a while so it could grow. I’m already kicking myself for not getting into bonsai four or five years ago when I first halfway considered it.
I want native trees that tend to bonsai well. I also have non-native interests though. I really love Japanese maples but own zero. For the time being I don’t want anything that can’t live outside here, approximately 7a hardiness zone. Ginkgo is my favorite tree. Hunting online for small ginkgo trees for sale was how I ran across some of the McMinnville options and started thinking about planning a trip.