Products and Services
At Blossoms Organic, "WE HELP GROW GARDENS." We are a full- service nursery.
Our highly knowledgeable and friendly staff are committed to helping you with your gardening questions and concerns. Our staff enjoys helping you learn about all aspects of your garden.
Stop by Blossoms for:
- A wide range of flowers, vegetables, shrubs, and trees including healthy basics and rare specialty items. And if we don't have a unique item, we are happy to find it for you.
- A large selection of soils, mulches, fertilizers and other amendments, as well as plant treatments. We have all the basics, plus exclusive products.
- Weekly free lectures on all aspects of gardening ranging from "Effective Watering" to "Growing Roses." Many lectures are correlated with the season and month - for example in the Spring, we have a "Soil Preparation" lecture, and in the Fall we have lectures on "Canning Your Fruit" and "Planting Bulbs."
- Our demonstration vegetable garden which improves our ability to teach classes and individuals.
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All the tools, equipment, hats, and gloves you need to spend time outside gardening well.
We want children and families to enjoy Blossoms and have fun gardening. We have a children's play area built by two of our staff that have children. At least three Saturdays a season, we host free children and family activities - Easter Saturday (plant seeds), Earth Day (make bird feeders and paint rocks) and the day before Mothers Day (make gifts for mom.)
Because our simple mission is to HELP GROW GARDENS and we are essentially educators, we contribute meaningful time and resources each year to a few community causes that combine gardening and education.
Click to view our ad in this week's Taos News
gardener comments:
“I am a regular customer at Blossoms - I love the casual environment, the beauty of the many plants, and the helpful staff." - M.J. Morgan
"The most important thing that Michelle Obama did was to say that food comes from the land,” Waters said of the White House garden groundbreaking. “People have not known that.They think it comes from the grocery store... it is all part of a delicious food revolution."
"Any academic concept generated more enthusiasm when we introduced it in the context of our school garden (at Enos Garcia Elementary). Students read about plants, worms, pollinators... wrote about what they observed... they measured and solved math problems about the garden... they drew their own map on what should be planted in each section... the garden provided a real world, hands-on bridge between abstract academic concepts and their real life experiences." Connie White Enos Garcia Elementary, Winner of 2008 National Gardening Association
