Buying Plants Boulder CO

When you buy a plant, make sure it is healthy. The leaves and branches should be a good color and shape, not discolored or distorted (unless the plant variety dictates this). There should be a good collection of roots, with not much loose potting mixture, but the plant should not be potbound.

Local Companies

Treehouse Nursery
(303) 449-8733
7450 Valmont Rd
Boulder, CO
West End Gardener
(303) 938-0607
777 Pearl St Ste D
Boulder, CO
Harlequin's Gardens
(303) 939-9403
4795 26th St
Boulder, CO
Star Nursery & Garden Center
(719) 543-1184
2006 N Santa Fe Ave
Pueblo, CO
Native Woods Garden Center & Nursery
(719) 783-4100
310 S 6th St
Westcliffe, CO
City Floral Greenhouse
(303) 399-1177
1440 Kearney St
Denver, CO
Pioneer Seed-Bart Ginther
(970) 842-5528
17581 County Rd 26
Brush, CO
Spring Fever Lawn and Garden
(303) 794-6000
6439 S Broadway
Littleton, CO
Malara Gardens
(303) 424-1452
7190 Kipling St
Arvada, CO
Fairplay Grower the
(719) 836-3300
600 Front
Fairplay, CO

Provided by:

When you buy a plant, make sure it is healthy. The leaves and branches should be a good color and shape, not discolored or distorted (unless the plant variety dictates this). There should be a good collection of roots, with not much loose potting mixture, but the plant should not be potbound. When a plant is potbound, no potting mixture is visible and the roots wind tightly around each other.



Shop prepared:

  •     Don’t go to the garden store without a list of what you want to buy.
  •     Make a simple plan of your garden; draw rough outline shapes to show individual specimens and groups of plants.
  •     In small areas you may have space for only one tree and a few key shrubs, and this makes it doubly important you choose wisely.




Where to shop:

  •     Garden Centers/Superstores: These places are the department stores of the gardening world, stocking everything from plants, seeds and potting mixture to tools and garden furniture.The great advantage of buying at a garden center is that you can seee the plants in leaf and in flower, season by season.
  •     Specialty Nurseries: These are usually run by enthusiasts by enthusiasts, and they often specialize in a particular plant type.
  •     Society, Garden Club and Public Garden Sales: Interesting cuttings, divisions, or seed-raised plants, often from club members’ collections or found in the public garden, may be had for good prices. These sales offer the chance to acquire the rare and unusual.
—from The Horticulture Gardener's Guide to Plants for Small Spaces by Clive Lane



Click here for more information on this book

From Horticulture Magazine

Featured Local Company

A Better Garden Maintenance LLC

303- 433-3752
PO Box 13313
Aurora, CO
http://www.abtagarden.com