In The Gap, on Brisbane's leafy northwestern edge, this not-for-profit nursery has quietly built its name around a single, unfashionable conviction: that the plants best suited to south-east Queensland gardens are the ones that grew here before anyone thought to garden at all. Run by volunteers rather than proprietors, it exists to put locally indigenous species back into the ground, whether that's a broadacre revegetation project or a suburban courtyard. The stock list runs to hundreds of species, from flowering natives like Alloxylon flammeum and Barklya syringifolia to groundcovers such as kidney weed and native geranium, alongside lesser-known edibles like warrigal spinach and angular pigface — plants chosen as much for their ecological role, feeding stingless bees, sheltering frogs, as for their good looks. Regular workshops and working bees mean the nursery doubles as a classroom, teaching visitors to identify and propagate the species that once defined this landscape. There's a stock list published online for those who like to plan ahead, and an articles section tracing Brisbane's wildflowers in more detail than most garden centres would bother with. It's an unglamorous, community-minded operation, but one with real depth of knowledge behind the tables of seedlings.
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