Padre Pio
Posted: January 19th, 2009, 2:07 pm
This nursery opened last year. 158 Annangrove Road, Kenthurst. Not open on Sunday. Apparently Padre Pio is a patron saint of gardens but I preferred the original name of Dragonstone. But I'm only a customer.
Odd nursery... Nick 'specialises' in shaped stock and root over rock. There is a large selection of stock plants but you have to be careful. Last time I was there [literally] there were only a few things priced so he gives prices as you bring the trees up. And it sorta depends on how you look and how he feels as to how the price goes... some prices are quite reasonable, some are totally outrageous. Two of us were looking at similar serissas. I got mine at $35 [still a bit high but it was advanced] and the other was put back when the quoted price was $65 'because it was almost a bonsai'. Rats... it is so little advanced over the one I chose that there should not have been a price difference.
The 'shaped' stock is interesting, some is so twisted and distorted that it looks better left on the ground, some is very interestingly twisted but the price is even more warped.
The plants are in rows on a large cement slap at the top of rise and the wind blows a lot. In the winter it's cold, in the summer hot and dry. The stock plants tend to be a bit water starvation hardy but it takes a couple of months to get them to loosen up and start growing seriously. That's not a negative as they do grow but I just don't like seeing plants so needy.
If you are a nursery crawler it is reasonable to give it a go and maybe he has priced everything now. But don't be surprised if the stock plant you find that you really want is priced above its worth. I did get two Zieria for $5 but everyone thought I was a bit mental - but I know how they develop. So there are bargains to be had but you still really need to know the retail worth of a stock plant before you start adding to your tree collection.
Odd nursery... Nick 'specialises' in shaped stock and root over rock. There is a large selection of stock plants but you have to be careful. Last time I was there [literally] there were only a few things priced so he gives prices as you bring the trees up. And it sorta depends on how you look and how he feels as to how the price goes... some prices are quite reasonable, some are totally outrageous. Two of us were looking at similar serissas. I got mine at $35 [still a bit high but it was advanced] and the other was put back when the quoted price was $65 'because it was almost a bonsai'. Rats... it is so little advanced over the one I chose that there should not have been a price difference.
The 'shaped' stock is interesting, some is so twisted and distorted that it looks better left on the ground, some is very interestingly twisted but the price is even more warped.
The plants are in rows on a large cement slap at the top of rise and the wind blows a lot. In the winter it's cold, in the summer hot and dry. The stock plants tend to be a bit water starvation hardy but it takes a couple of months to get them to loosen up and start growing seriously. That's not a negative as they do grow but I just don't like seeing plants so needy.
If you are a nursery crawler it is reasonable to give it a go and maybe he has priced everything now. But don't be surprised if the stock plant you find that you really want is priced above its worth. I did get two Zieria for $5 but everyone thought I was a bit mental - but I know how they develop. So there are bargains to be had but you still really need to know the retail worth of a stock plant before you start adding to your tree collection.