In Armidale, on the New England Tablelands, a not-for-profit nursery has been growing native plants since the early 1980s, folding environmental restoration work into its retail operation. What began as a tree-planting outfit for the region's farmers and graziers has grown into something broader: a public-facing nursery selling Australian garden plants, home-grown vegetable seedlings and herbs alongside a wholesale operation supplying tubestock for larger revegetation projects. The premises on Mann Street are open six days a week, and the staff bring genuine horticultural and ecological expertise — the same team that prepares flora and fauna reports and biodiversity assessments for councils and landholders also fields questions from home gardeners at the counter. It's an unusual pairing of purposes: profits from plant sales help fund the group's wider ecological work, bundled under its Every Tree Counts banner, which supports habitat restoration and weed control across the New England and Central West districts. For visitors, that translates into a nursery stocked with plants genuinely suited to the tablelands' climate and soils, chosen by people who understand how they perform in the ground locally, not just in a display bed. It's a working nursery with a conservation backbone, worth seeking out for both the plants and the purpose behind them.
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