A green thumbs-up to urban farming 19-08-2008 Founded by San Diego native Bill Tall in 1972,
City Farmers
Nursery is a family-owned, independently operated garden supply
nursery located in the heart of San Diego. At City Farmers
Nursery, Bill Tall tends to visitors, animals, plants – and his mission
to get city dwellers to grow their own food.
At the end of an industrial stretch of Euclid Avenue, San Diego, occupied by
an equipment rental yard, a liquor mart, and an auto repair shop,
City Farmers
Nursery is a verdant surprise. But even if this were an affluent area, City
Farmers would be a striking departure from the typical corporate garden center.
Small plants that will someday bear Early Girl tomatoes, lemon cucumbers, and
chili peppers sit in trays near the parking lot. Not far from burbling tanks of
baby koi and albino channel carp, a yellow-and-black mutt named Abby sleeps
beneath a table full of petunias and marigolds.
Inside the store, a bowl on the counter holds eggs, free for the taking. A
high-backed chest is filled with jars of seeds and baskets of Yellow Finn,
Purple Peruvian, and Bintje potato tubers waiting to be planted.
There’s an old upright piano with ivory keys and a hammock strung across the
room, not far from a poison-green parrot with orange shoulders and a yellow
head. Presiding over it all from behind the counter is owner
Bill
Tall, ringing up sales and dispensing advice on growing plants of all kinds,
pretty much the same way he’s done it for the past 36 years.
Through his advice, free classes, school tours, and community events, Mr.
Tall is a grass-roots advocate for self-sufficiency and the importance of
growing fresh organic produce at home, even if you live in the city. “There’s a
uniqueness to being able to eat something you grew,” says Tall. “This is a place
for city kids to come and learn something different … to plant a seed [that will
help them] later on in life to appreciate gardening.”
For example, Tall shows around a class of 3- and 4-year olds from a local
Head Start class around the nursery. In the herb section, Tall invites the
children to pinch a mint leaf between their fingers and gently rub it. “See,
this one smells like toothpaste,” he says.
While half of the class plants flower bulbs in pots, Tall takes the others on
a tour. They marvel at Clyde, the Welsh pony, who wanders around the same pen as
black-and-scarlet roosters, chickens, a flock of geese, and a pygmy goat.
Walking up a slope to the fruit-tree nursery, Tall points to the plants growing
in shallow beds on the roof of his shed.
“See the vegetables growing on the roof?” he asks. “You can grow vegetables
on top of your roof. But be sure to ask your mom and dad first.” With older
kids, he might talk about conservation or show them how to start a compost pile
at home.
Today, City Farmers specializes in those hard-to-find items that big box and
chain stores just aren’t interested in. Further, they organically maintain
every plant, bush and tree "as Mother Nature intended."
One of the most important aspects of City Farmers is the community
involvement. The Nursery is partners with a wide variety of schools,
neighborhood associations and civic groups.
Source: Christian Science Monitor LinksClick here to read the full article on the City Farmers NurseryClick here to visit the website of the City Farmers NurseryClick here to view the location of the Nursery on Google Maps back |


