As we finally near warmer weather, it's time to start thinking about our gardens and landscaping. Even the greenest of thumbs sometimes needs help — sometimes lots of it. Which plants to buy? How to plant them? Where to plant them? How to nurture them?
The best-run garden centers have the answers. They employ experts and — maybe most important — emphasize quality. Selling plants is not like selling power tools or lumber. Plants are alive, each one unique and each one vulnerable to disease, injury, and death.
If you need help, nonprofit Twin Cities Consumers' Checkbook's ratings of area garden centers for quality and price can help you find it. For the next month, Checkbook is offering free access to its ratings of area garden centers to StarTribune readers via this link: Checkbook.org/startribune/garden-centers.
Running a good garden center or nursery takes knowledge, years of experience, organizational skill and a strong commitment to quality. And since most garden centers buy — rather than raise — most of what they sell, there is room for tremendous variation in buying ability and buying standards.
The opinions Checkbook collected from Twin Cities area consumers on garden centers they use reflect the big variation in quality among retailers.
Some stores were rated "superior" for "quality of products" by at least 90 percent of their surveyed customers, but several other retailers were rated "superior" on this question by fewer than 40 percent.
Surveyed consumers gave Home Depot low marks for quality — its stores scored, on average, lower than almost all of the independent stores.
But for the selection of plants it sells, Home Depot does very well on price. Checkbook's undercover shoppers found that Home Depot's prices averaged 41 percent below the all-store average for comparable items.