Friday, August 6, 2021 CapitalPress.com Garden Thyme Nursery: Growing and learning at the same time By BRENNA WIEGAND For the Capital Press SILVERTON, Ore. — Patti Harris got into the greenhouse business while looking for a way to get out of the house. She had to quit her bank- ing job after an illness affected her eyesight. To combat cabin fever, her hus- band, George, began shut- tling Patti to nursery-related classes at Chemeketa Com- munity College in Salem. “I loved it and I got so excited; prior to that I hadn’t been able to grow anything,” Patti said. “Any sane person would have gone to work for a nursery to figure out what the reality was, but I jumped in with both feet.” In 2000, the Harrises opened Garden Thyme Nurs- ery on 6½ acres in Silverton just up the road from the Ore- gon Garden, which had just broken ground. “Pretty soon it hit home that the reason everything grew so well was because (Chemeketa) had a green- house, a watering system that could deliver fertilizer and a staff taking care of things when I wasn’t there,” she said. “It is a different story when suddenly it’s 90 degrees out here and if the 4-inch pots don’t get watered they die. “It was a huge shift in Willamette Gardens: Native plant nursery a business and sanctuary on her own in a wheelbarrow until a friend urged her to avoid “wrecking her shoul- ders” by getting the tractor. Now, it’s used CORVALLIS, Ore. — Esther Gruber by her son to mix the soils and do the till- McIvoy’s Willamette Gardens is a nursery ing for her garden. specializing in native “I don’t buy pre-made plants. potting soils because I Her efforts to prop- don’t use any pesticides or herbicides,” she said. agate native trees She purchases PRC — and shrubs, perenni- als, grasses, vines, “publicly recycled com- sedges and ferns on post” — from the city’s her small plot near cen- residential recycling tral Corvallis, Ore., pickup service. It con- has resulted in a niche tains garden and woody nursery business that debris that she mixes recently celebrated its with bark and pumice to 20th anniversary. make the compost she She terms the nurs- uses for her plants. ery “more of a labor “Each plant has its of love” with the only own specifications and major investment being qualifications for start- a small tractor. ing them,” she said. She has also spent Geoff Parks/For the Capital Press “Some are really easy her life working on Esther Gruber McIvoy tends part — from cuttings — and rare plants, soil inverte- of her Willamette Gardens na- some take more work. Some I get bare-root if brates and other topics. tive plants nursery. I don’t have them. And “I’ve always been natives need to be put in more of a conservationist than an environmentalist,” McIvoy said, the right part of a habitat.” who helped work toward getting Califor- Willamette Gardens also produces nia’s Point Reyes designated a national plants for the Benton County Soil and seashore, which now “offers visitors over Water Conservation Service on a year- 1,500 species of plants and animals to ahead basis, she said. discover.” Those who purchase plants from her are Her plants are grown in raised beds and specific about what they want, she said, planters, or she does cuttings, McIvoy said. including color preferences, evergreen or She currently sells the plants “on a retail deciduous trees, watering needs and sun basis at a wholesale price,” saying it’s the exposure. only way to keep a steady business with- But the gardens are a sanctuary for McI- out having to match the prices of larger voy, who does the work to make it possible. wholesalers. “I love coming out here; it’s my escape,” She used to mix all of her potting soils she said. By GEOFF PARKS For the Capital Press Brenna Wiegand/For the Capital Press Patti Harris sizes up the display gardens at Garden Thyme Nursery in Silverton, Ore. The retail operation grows over 300 varieties of vegetables, herbs and low-maintenance, vigorous and long-blooming pe- rennials with an emphasis on drought-tolerant and deer-resistant plants. how much responsibility there was and what sells and what doesn’t and what’s easy to propagate and what isn’t, so it was still a pretty steep learning curve.” The nursery now grows over 300 varieties of vege- tables, herbs and low-main- tenance, vigorous and long-blooming perenni- als with an emphasis on drought-tolerant and deer-re- sistant plants. COVID-19, September’s wildfires, the ice storm in February and a record-break- ing heat wave the end of June have each ushered in new challenges. Despite the upheaval con- nected with COVID, 2020 was a great vegetable season, Harris said. “I had produced almost enough vegetable plants for a normal season — some- where between 16,000 and 20,000 starts — before we found out the pandemic was going to close things down,” she said. “Sales were up so much that the stores couldn’t keep up and we were able to sell through our veg stock.” Then there was the heatwave. The day it hit 116 degrees a large shipment was on the last leg of its trip from Min- nesota when the truck got stuck in Salem less than half an hour away. The plants suf- fered substantially, but Har- ris remains hopeful as she watches over the young plants. She said the incident provided her the opportunity to observe which plants held up best. 5 S226625-1