海角大神

Autumn is prime shopping time for gardeners

Need new shrubs or trees? Autumn is prime shopping season since garden centers often put them on sale.

The purchase of this purple Japanese maple ignited a series of fall feeding frenzies. At $5, the ornamental tree was more than a bargain; it was a steal. And so I started looking for more.

Photo courtesy of Craig Summers Black

September 22, 2010

Thank you, thank you, thank you. So good to be back.

Really. Thank you. Stop. You鈥檙e too kind. I鈥檒l be here all week.

Now where was I before I got interrupted? Oh, yes: telling you why fall is such a great time to go shopping. Not for Manolos and Jimmy Choos, but plants, especially woodies. (That's gardener talk for trees and shrubs).

I know that you know this is a great time to plant -- reliable moisture, moderate temps, warmish soil conducive to root growth. But I guess no one else does. So nurseries 鈥 and even the big box stores 鈥 drastically reduce their prices right about now so they don鈥檛 end up with a parking lot full of brittle yellow sticks.

So, naturally, I warmed up my credit card.

The Transplanted Gardener goes shopping

My best buy last week was at one of those monster mega-conglomerates. A lone was hidden in a sea of ornamental cherries (which are doomed in this climate). But it had no price tag. And, dang, the growing tip was snapped off.

So I accosted a uniformed member of this fine establishment and asked him the price of said tree. His response: 鈥淟et鈥檚 see. That size tree goes for $29.鈥 And this tree in particular? 鈥淵ou can have it for $4.鈥 Sold American!

At a local nursery noted for its frustratingly narrow range of offerings, I was surprised to find that I鈥檝e lusted for all year 鈥 30 percent off! And home it goes.

Good thing I have a big Murkin-made truck: 鈥機ause yet another detour to a big box led to the discovery of two for less than 10 bucks each. Come to papa!

So went my spree: That blushing pink little willow? One-third off. The little variegated buttercup? Same. And the magnificent yellow Elizabeth magnolia, sought all season to replace the late, lamented Butterflies magnolias, a stunning half-off. Score!

This isn't the first time

My foray into this kind of fall retail therapy began about 10 years ago when I stumbled into a huge national store in a tiny Iowa town. Behold 鈥 a veritable sea of Acer palmatum atropurpureum. Five dollars each. I nearly swooned.

But because I was driving my wife鈥檚 car, I bought only one. One: Can you believe it? To this day I still sigh when I think about it, wishing I could have bought the whole lot.

Think of it: Japanese maple futures! It would have performed a whole lot better than my stock portfolio.

What else I鈥檓 into this week: .

Hey, it鈥檚 starting to get cold.

Craig Summers Black, The Transplanted Gardener, is one of nine garden writers who blog regularly at Diggin' it. You can read more of what he's written by clicking here. You may also follow Craig鈥檚 further adventures in gardening, music, and rural life on .