Tree of Life Nursery
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Posts on Native gardening. Tree of Life Nursery is the largest grower of California native plants in the state. We believe in creating spaces that look and feel authentically Californian.
California Native Garden: Plant Selection and Establishment Throughout the Seasons w/ Colin Dunleavy
Tree of Life Nursery
2w ago
Saturday, April 27, 2024.
9:30am – 10:30am
Join Colin Dunleavy, owner of Live Forever Landscape, in the barn on Saturday morning as he takes you through the steps of choosing the perfect pallet for your yard, and how to maintain your yard throughout the year!
This workshop is free and open to all ..read more
Tree of Life Nursery
2w ago
Sorry about missing March. No excuse, or 1000 excuses, you choose. Pause. That’s what I thought, the former… good choice. And now on to April.
Current events, history, review, and notes
The cool (never extremely cold) and consistently wet winter/spring season has allowed us to put our gardens on autopilot. Even brand new plantings have required very little extra attention. Our storms have stacked up evenly over the last six months or so, totaling 20” of rain to date (TOLN reading), with more on the immediate horizon. Rejoicing in another easy year to be a naturist gardener.
Watering
Come June ..read more
Tree of Life Nursery
1M ago
Saturday, April 13, 2024.
10:30am – 11:00am
Step into a world where nature’s canvas comes alive with vibrant colors and fragrant blooms. Our nursery gardens are not just a sight to behold; they’re an immersive experience waiting to be discovered. Wander through winding pathways lined with a kaleidoscope of native plants, each one telling a story of resilience and beauty. From the soothing trickle of water features to the symphony of birdsong overhead, every corner of our gardens beckons you to pause, breathe, and reconnect with the natural world. Whether you’re a seasoned gardener seeking insp ..read more
Tree of Life Nursery
2M ago
Words and photos by Mike Evans
Four generations, maybe even five for the most prolific. That’s the family effect of losing San Onofre, one of California’s most iconic surfing beaches. The ocean we celebrated every day in every way has moved closer to the bluff, taking out the dirt road where the old men played bocce. The lineup of classic cars, trucks, panel vans, travel vans, campers, woodies, even converted passenger buses, longboards, folding tables, dogs of every sort, kids of every age, (both dogs and kids running absolutely wild), ladies playing bridge, old men talking story, picnics la ..read more
Tree of Life Nursery
2M ago
special guest: Tony Tubbs
Saturday, February 24, 2024.
9:00am – 4:00pm
PLANT SALE: 10% off all plants to CNPS members. Not a member? Sign up at the nursery on Saturday, and take advantage of the 10% off + a gift for signing up!
9:45am Welcome and introduction
10:00am Tony Tubbs, Educator, photographer, habitat restorationist – Presentation
“INSPIRING THE NEXT GENERATION”
Tony Tubbs will bring us highlights of his 10-year project inspiring and educating students, while restoring functional habitat at Tesoro High School in Capistrano Unified School district. Their program for environmental educa ..read more
Tree of Life Nursery
3M ago
A rainy Anza Borrego afternoon. © Emily Sluiman 2024
Our climate zone is called Mediterranean, but maybe we should start referring to our weather as uniquely “Californian.” We get our rain in winter and spring. But in between what we call “rain events,” we can have some of the most beautiful days imaginable. It is not uncommon to appreciate a perfect 78 degree beach day, only to be immediately followed by cold blustery winds, heavy rain, and snow levels below 3000 feet. Three or four days like that and when it clears, we’re back to the beach! No where on earth is quite like this.
This is why w ..read more
Tree of Life Nursery
4M ago
“Acts of creation are ordinarily reserved for gods and poets. But humbler folk may circumvent this restriction if they know how. To plant a pine for example, one need be neither god nor poet. One need only own a good shovel.” Aldo Leopold
Sunset in the San Gorgonio wilderness. Photo by Emily Sluiman.
Current events, history, review, and notes
Happy New Year! Calendar year, that is. In the natural garden we start our year around September 15 celebrating post-summer and ready for fall. Right now we’re in winter which can generally mean we’re in a season of rest and reflection.
Watering
Seasonal ..read more
Tree of Life Nursery
5M ago
Toyon Heteromeles arbutifolia showing off for the season. 2023 Emily Sluiman
December is a quiet month, at least in the world of nature. The natural garden is a quiet place as well, and a perfect refuge for us in a month when many are running about for social events, shopping, driving to a vacation spot or to an airport, generally making traffic worse, increasing our stress, and possibly planting in us the notion, “Everyone’s rushing so we must all be late, including me.”
Many nature lovers and native plant gardeners become experts in the field of phenology, defined: “the study of cyclic ..read more
Tree of Life Nursery
6M ago
Baccharis pilularis in the setting sun. Photo by: Emily Sluiman
Fall is in the air and the breeze, in the soil and on the calendar. And just in time, as always, comes the perfect precursor for winter, when our natural gardens grow ever quiet. Nights are much cooler, days are shorter and some plants are starting their annual dormancy while others are pushing out new growth… even flowers. Many, of course, have gone to seed. Winter rains are just around the corner.
Current events, history, review, and notes
Anticipation. We’re still asking the southern California question we pose every year – How ..read more
Tree of Life Nursery
7M ago
Plant natives, experience nature. It’s that simple.
Saturday, November 11, 2023
9:00am – 3:00pm
Come for all or just a part. Help us celebrate the best planting time for natives! Bring your own food, lunch, snacks, water etc.
10:00am Re-Wild Defined in Natural Gardens w/ Mike Evans
10:45am A Green Fire
Aldo Leopold documentary screening in the barn
12:00 – 1:30pm Lunchtime Reading Circle
Bring a book or a few titles to share with the group. Do you have a complete shelf of nature literature? John Muir, Terry Tempest Williams, Barry Lopes, Craig Childs, Ed Abbey, Wallace Stegner, Wendell Berry ..read more