My previous post about Peacock Horticultural Nursery in Sebastopol ended here:
The gate at the end of the path in photo above leads to Robert and Marty’s private garden.
When I last visited, in September 2021, the garden was only a few years old. Check out
my post from then to get a baseline. Then compare to the photos below. As you can see, the garden has settled in very nicely. Lots of TLC and a mild climate have helped as well.
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The garden is full of the plants Robert and Marty love, ranging from cacti and succulents to flowering perennials and carnivorous plants. I even spotted a cycad or two. Robert, Marty, and I like pretty much the same plants. If this, by magic, ended being my garden, there’s very little I would change.
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Red, orange, purple, yellow: I love all these vibrant colors |
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Alstroemeria ‘Indian Summer’ (back), Aster × frikartii ‘Monch’ (front) |
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Pineapple lily (Eucomis) |
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×Mangave ‘Tooth Fairy’ (left) |
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See how some of the terminal spines on this ×Mangave ‘Tooth Fairy’ are folded down? I’ve seen these on others as well. I wonder if it’s a tissue-culture artifact? |
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Succulents and cacti, what’s not to like? |
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Yucca ‘Tiny Star’ and Agave parrasana ‘Fireball’ |
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Xanthorrhoea (glauca?) and Agave ‘Moon Glow’ |
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Agave salmiana var. ferox ‘Medio Picta’, another wonderful San Marcos Growers introduction |
As nursery owners, Robert and Marty have access to a wide range of plant material. Many of the plants in their nursery, and in their garden, are from
San Marcos Growers in Santa Barbara. As
I mentioned before, San Marcos will close their doors at the end of the year. The loss to the horticultural community in California and beyond is incalculable. San Marcos grows plants that literally nobody else has. After they sail into the sunset, these plants will simply stop being available unless somebody else steps up to the plate and “adopts” them. At this stage, nobody knows how this will all shake out, but at least
the San Marcos Growers website, the best plant resource on the web, will remain active, as manager Randy Baldwin assured me.
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Great place to sit |
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I’ve long dreamed of having a shade structure like that |
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Imagine sitting here listening to the sound of the first autumn rain (which this year may never come) |
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Sincoregelia ‘Galactic Warrior’, another San Marcos Growers plant |
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Opuntia ‘Dark Knight’ and Agave ovatifolia |
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Cacti, aloes, palms, and... |
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...Aloe cooperi, a grass aloe, originally from Annie’s Annuals |
Robert is a fellow agave collector, and he has several rarities from
Plant Delights Nursery that I’ve been coveting. I was very excited to see them in person for the first time.
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Agave ‘Bareback Rider’, a variegated sport of ‘Crazy Horse’ (A. cupreata × asperrima) |
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Agave × ocahuata ‘Luminescence’, a yellow-centered sport of A. ‘Blue Glow’ (A. attenuata × ocahui) |
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Agave titanota ‘Dusty Roads’ |
A few more behind-the-scenes pictures:
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Agave titanota ‘Snaggle Tooth’. This variegated selection used to be very hard to find (and expensive), but now that it’s in tissue culture, it’s become much more available and affordable. |
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Robert and Kyle in a hoop house full of collector plants |
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Another great photo of Marty (left) and Robert |
Peacock Horticultural Nursery’s 20th anniversary sale continues until September 28. Everything in the nursery is 25% off, with an additional 10% off succulents and cacti. That’s a massive savings. With plant prices expected to increase in the coming year, now’s the perfect time to shop!
Peacock Horticultural Nursery is open by appointment only. Making an appointment is super easy — simply
go to this page. Each appointment is for a 30-minute time slot, but you can stay as long as you want.
Their website has all the information you need, including their
current availability list.
© Gerhard Bock, 2025. All rights reserved. To receive all new posts by email, please subscribe here.
Fantastic, colorful garden. Love that shade structure, and good sized, too. His agave collection is wonderful, as is the Sincoregelia ‘Galactic Warrior’ - dang! I have to work in a visit, hopefully soon.
ReplyDeleteLovely garden and great photos. I think your Agave IDs are mixed up in the last few photos. The ‘Bareback Rider’ looks like an ovatifolia and the ‘Awakening Angel’ looks more like oteroi or titanota.
ReplyDeleteI was looking forward to this post, after I read the last one. A glorious garden, indeed!
ReplyDeleteCurious about the seasonally flooded area that cannot be planted. No rain gardens in this Mediterranean climate?
Their private garden has evolved very quickly in such a short period of time. Love the aster and alstomeria colour contrasts. Do they ever find time to sit? How much fun was it to explore the collector plants in the hoop house? People are very lucky to live close to such a great nursery.
ReplyDelete"The open area beyond... floods seasonally": Goodness, that seems an odd concept in a private garden in California. It makes me think of 'Rain Gardens' that are a thing in Seattle, though most likely there's a significant difference in precipitation.
ReplyDeleteTheir shade structure is magnificent and looks like it's being used and enjoyed. If only they could put in on stilts in the flood area, with a couple bridge paths for access...
Chavli
The reference to flooding caught my interest too. Quick search reveals its the proximity to the Laguna de Santa Rosa wetland that poses flooding risk, and FEMA gives Sebastopol a high flood risk rating too. I lived in nearby Petaluma in the late '70s during an extreme drought period, so that's my only memory of NorCal! Lovely to see 'Fireball' again -- mine was about that size when it began to rot...
ReplyDelete