WHOLESALE PRICE LIST 



This fall we have over fifty varieities of 

 Container-grown Mums. All varieties are 

 Yoder stock and include many of the new 

 introductions as of January 1994. 



' Delivery Is Included In price 



(minimum $200 order) 

 Sold First Come-First Served 



• High Quality / Reasonable Prices 



• Grown in combination mix of 



Sunshine Mix, Sand & Horse 

 Manure w/ Osmocote top dressing 



Soil weighs more to prevent 

 drying out and tipping over 



No cherry picking , 



^lO^ 



GARDHMS 



OF A L r w IV 



We Offer Three Sizes 



(largest size is limited in productior)) 

 PRICES 



CLASSIC CUSTOM 2000 



12" X 11' -3 Plants per Pot 



200 Available - 4 ea. of 50 varieties 



$10 Each 



CLASSIC CUSTOM 600 



8 1/2" X 8 1/2" - 1 Plant per Pot 

 6000 Available -50+ 



$1.95 Each 



ROUTE 28 . ALTON, NH 



603^69-2127 or 

 603-875-4444 



FAX 603-569-3964 



Specioi Offer! 

 PREFINISHED MUMS 



Toke delivery of any Mums before Aug. 15th 

 S TAKE 10% OFF THESE PRICES! 



(Flonts will b» buddmd w/ no tolor showing) 



CLASSIC CUSTOM 400 



7 3/4" X r ■ 1 Plar« per Pol 

 12.000 Available - 50+ varieties 



$1.25 Each 



Please Phone or FAX for 

 further information. Thank you! 



are three areas — a 60x20 area of 

 crushed stone; and an area for 

 three cars marked off on the house 

 driveway; also, the lawn has been 

 shortened and the area next to the 

 road asphalted, giving a place for 

 delivery trucks to unload 



The largest area is the most 

 changed. Before this year, it was a 

 gravel strip next to the road — "so 

 narrow that if you parked beside a 

 van, you'd have to pull out into 

 the road in order to see around it. 

 There were never any accidents, 

 but I worried." A display garden 

 was on the slope below it 



Now there's a dry retaining 

 wall — maybe five feet high — built 

 of Diamond Stone — 70-pound inter- 

 locking cement blocks, tiered (bat- 

 tered) slightly. The slope and most 

 of the garden are gone, although a 

 jog in the wall accommodates a 

 good specimen of pinus slrobus nana, 

 which will be the centerpiece of a 

 smaller display. 



A climbing rose ("We saved out 

 a "New Dawn") will grow up the 

 wall; terracotta pots filled with an- 

 nuals are already on top. 



Another change was that the steps 

 from the street to the second level 

 are no longer there; a walk of blue- 

 stone leads into the sales area The 

 railing of steel pipe — repeating the 

 curve of the walk — was made by a 

 local welder (For a quick, clean in- 

 stallation, Barbara recommends 

 drive-in fence posts' — metal squares 

 with pointed bottoms These were 

 driven into the ground; the railing 

 supports were placed inside and 

 welded to them — "a lot neater than 

 using a post hole digger ") 



People like the changes — older 

 people in particular appreciate the 

 gentler slope of the walk, as well 

 as the solid railing 



The cut-flower bed to the right 

 of the axis wasn't planted this year, 

 but covered with sawdust — it s 

 square shape is crisp against the 

 grass — and used for display The 

 four corners of the square are 

 planted; groups of potted plants 

 are placed in geometric configura- 

 tions around them and lead to a 

 focal point — one of Monet's luteurs 

 filled with ivy geraniums (a tuleur is 

 a three-legged iron stand with sev- 



eral shelves on which to place 

 trailing plants — a device used by 

 Monet at Civerny — "a blacksmith 

 up in Maine makes them — I liked 

 the design") There's space to 

 walk around. It's not complicated, 

 but Barbara says it's made a differ- 

 ence — sales have been stronger 

 from this particular area 



"I LOVE PERENNIALS— and Im a 



reader — I'm constantly reading about 

 them and finding new ones 1 want to 

 try And in the last few years, there 

 have been a remarkable number of ex- 

 citing introductions." 



For several years, Barbara has 

 had problems with the town over 

 zoning, but these have been re- 

 solved Expansion will occur in un- 

 obtrusive ways — Rye Ridge has col- 

 lected, grown, experimented with, 

 and overwintered garden material 

 for ten years now and today offers 

 bOO varietie's of perennials (as well 

 as several hundred annuals) to its 

 customers; Barbara's own enthusi- 

 asm, now fueled by the expecta- 

 tions of her customers (from Maine 

 and Massachusetts, as well as lo- 



