

Taproot Eco Design is getting back into the plant nursery business. We have spent the last several years establishing Taproot Eco Design in the Knoxville/Maryville landscape markets and we want to get back into the plant production business, but on a smaller scale. The amount of money that landscape installers spend on plants is quite large over the course of a year – in excess of $40,000 for us. Any amount of these plants that we can produce ourselves is money straight into our pocket. With issues like inconsistent availability, poor quality or simply not enough stock, we decided that growing our own plants was the way to go. Taproot started out on a small piece of land in Hardin Valley (pictured above), we had no idea what we were doing but were driven by a passion for plants and a willingness to learn.
The main theme of one of my favorite books, Zen Mind, Beginner’s Mind by Shunryu Suzuki, talks about always maintaining the beginner’s mind in your meditation practice. The beginner’s mind is excited, passionate and always open to new ideas. The opening of the book says: “In the beginner’s mind there are many possibilities, but in the expert’s there are few.” Someone that approaches landscape design with a beginner’s mind will never think they know it all and understand that becoming an expert in this business means that you learn something new every day. If anyone in the the landscape industry ever tells you they have it all figured out – run away from that person as fast as you can and don’t look back.



Taproot Nursery will mainly produce the plants that we use in our design/installs – lots of grasses, sedges, native perennials, several types of ferns, hosta and succulents. Obviously we can not produce ALL the plants we use in a given design like trees, most shrubs or larger scale specimens because we simply do not have the room. With that being said, it is amazing how much you can produce in such a small area given that a 1 gallon pot does not require much space. We do have the advantage of having full sun, partial shade and full shade all in the same small backyard. We can grow full shade ferns 70 feet away from full sun perennials like amsonia hubrichtii. This a hard set up to create artificially (shade cloth) so we will not waste what we have been afforded.



Taproot has two main goals that need to reach for this endeavor to be successful – reduce the cost of plant material by 25% by growing our own stock and learn more about the plants we install. Perfecting the process of growing plants that we use in our designs will give us a more in-depth knowledge of plant processes and in turn give every plant we install the best shot at success. By immersing ourselves in the plant production process we hope that better overall plant health and noticing the signs of plant sickness will make us better at what we do and ultimately will benefit our customers and their landscapes.
Stay tuned as we chronicle the process of converting a suburban backyard into a fully functioning native plant nursery. We will construct plant growing tiers by using an old trampoline frame, create a rain catchment system that will allow us to use untreated water most of the year and dig out a pond for water sequestration. We are excited and hope you can come along for the ride.





