Tucked inside Northey Street City Farm on Brisbane's inner-north fringe, this nursery grows out of a working, not-for-profit community farm rather than a retail formula, and it shows in the range: seasonal veggie seedlings, culinary and traditional herbs, bush tucker plants, aquatic and edible water plants, backyard fruit trees and a considered edit of native and indoor varieties, all chosen for their ability to handle Brisbane's heat, humidity and clay. Staff and volunteers lean on organic and permaculture principles rather than a sales script, equally useful for a first veggie patch or a full food forest. The shelves extend into practical extras — organic fertilisers, potting mixes and mulches from ethical suppliers, worm farms, self-watering pots, urban composters, insect hotels and a refill station for topping up liquid fertiliser bottles. It's also a partner site for Brisbane City Council's free native plant program, and a Pay-it-Forward scheme channels plant purchases toward First Nations communities. Beyond the point of sale, the nursery doubles as a gathering space — book clubs, garden groups and art classes are welcomed into its greenery free of charge. It's less a shop than an extension of the farm's broader mission: growing food, sharing knowledge, and keeping a patch of inner Brisbane genuinely green.