Our Fruit Collection
  Our Rose Collection

Greetings from Ettersburg……

Greenmantle Nursery originated in 1983 as an offshoot of Ram and Marissa Fishman's respective horticultural collections. We are pleased to make our plants available to you….


The Fruit Collection

" First in spring to gather the rose,
and ripe apples in the autumn…."

- Virgil (70 - 19 BC), The Georgics

The Greenmantle Catalog © 1983 has been in print for more than two decades — Time to revise! Our original 30-page reference work must now be expanded to reflect our current collections of Fruit and Roses. Eventually, a new volume will be announced here.

Meanwhile . . .
A great deal of horticultural history, information, and advice is presented here on Greenmantle's website — in order to anticipate most questions about our stock and our business. Please take the time to explore this site & learn about our hundreds of Fruit and Rose offerings — If you wish to consult further, you may contact us at:

Greenmantle Nursery
3010 Ettersburg Road
Garberville CA 95542
(707) 986-7504

The Rose Collection

Ram specializes in diverse fruit for the home orchard, with varieties ranging from the commonplace to the rare. The fruit offerings include more than 250 apples - plus numerous pears, Asian pears, plums, cherries, peaches, quinces, and figs. Emphasis is primarily on eating quality as well as such factors as historical significance and disease-resistance. The foundation of the Fruit Collection rests on the old homestead varieties of our bio-region, and features the legacy of Albert Etter (1872-1950) the plant breeder whose private experiment station was located a few miles from here. Many other varieties have been collected from pomological colleagues, both amateur and professional, throughout the U.S.


>> The Fruit Collection

>>"Antique"  Fruit  for
       New Orchards

>> Fruit Features
>> Fruit Tree Ordering Info


Pink Pearmain® Apple

Marissa cultivates some 400 different roses, and these form the main motif of the Greenmantle landscape gardens. The focus of the Rose Collection is on the great classics - all of the older types are represented - along with the finest species and a selection of choice modern varieties. Superior merit has been the standard for every rose, and that quality has been measured by beauty, history, health, fragrance, and rarity. These mother plants were assembled over 3 decades of intense collecting from sources in several countries. The inherent charm of the Genus Rosa is its astonishing floral diversity. The rose offers a plant for every time, place & taste......choose well and enjoy the pleasure of their lasting beauty in your own garden..


>> The Rose Collection

>> The  Age  of  the  Rose

>> Rose Showcase

>> Rose Ordering Info


Magenta Rose


Welcome to our home on the Web …..

A quarter century ago, we dedicated the Greenmantle Catalog "To all the Old-timers, Long may they thrive…." By now, most of the men and women we were honoring have passed from the scene - leaving a legacy of knowledge and cherished heirloom varieties. Our own generation is now maturing into old-timers, and with this inheritance comes the responsibility of stewardship.

Like the plants we nurture - we're rather old-fashioned........ Our apologies in advance for not conforming to contemporary standards of electronic commerce. Even as Greenmantle Nursery enters the Information Age, we remain grounded in the down-to-earth work of preserving and sharing a living horticultural heritage. All this takes time, but the two of us are committed to traditional service, giving each order our personal attention.

Site Map & Index


The Road to Ettersburg

Greenmantle does not maintain a regular retail facility at our nursery grounds, and regretfully we are unable to accommodate visitors.......


Ixia viridiflora

Browse in Other Categories


Select Trees


Rare Bulbs & Species Iris

Paulownia tomentosa
aka The Empress Tree
" Art does not yield the crown to Nature in the creation of a garden adorned with rare trees, and a green mantle always."

- Veronica Franco (1546 - 1591)

 

Our Climate......and Organic Culture

"The climate of Ettersburg is just like paradise, only you have to work."

- Albert Etter (1872 - 1950)               

Greenmantle Nursery is situated on 32 acres at an elevation of 1500' in a remote area adjacent to the Kings Range National Wilderness. Weather varies from extremely hot and dry in the summer, to cool and very wet during the winter rainy season. Despite our proximity to the Pacific Ocean, the Kings Range blocks the moderating effect of marine air. While we see fog billowing in waves over distant ridgelines, our own relative humidity remains quite low. Consequently, our summer daytime temperatures frequently reach into the 90's, then drop into the 40's at night. Highs of 105 degrees F have been recorded and any rainfall between May and October must be considered exceptional.

"To those of us who are gardeners and therefore also interested in landscapes - the earth's green mantle as it affords a home for man - these regions of winter rainfall have a significance that immediately separates them in our minds from other parts of the earth..... The traveler always knows when he is in a Mediterranean land."

- Lester Hawkins (1915-1985), "A Gardener's Guide to the Mediterannean Climate" in The Pacific Horticulture Book of Western Gardening 1990

The rainy season usually commences by November and continues through April. During this period, we can receive 100" of rainfall, and in some years upwards of 150" has been recorded. Precipitation in these amounts makes us one of the wettest climates in North America, with virtually all the moisture falling during one-half of the year. While snow is an occasional phenomenon and extended freezes have occurred, temperatures below 25 degrees F are uncommon; our historic low was 9 degrees F in 1990. We do get our share of light frost during the dormant season, hence winter chill requirements have never been an issue for us in the orchard or nursery.

Etter believed that the climate of the Ettersburg area was unusually felicitous to a broad range of plant life, promoting vigor, size, and longevity - especially for trees. Our region is notable for its venerable and giant specimens of Douglas Fir, Coast Redwood, and Madrones. For domestic plantings, the lack of summer rainfall mandates frequent deep irrigation. This offers a significant boon to plant health; diseases like fireblight, apple scab, and rose black spot are much less prevalent than they are in more humid places. This makes organic culture a more viable option for gardener, orchardist, and nurseryman.

"Water, soil, and the earth's green mantle of plants make up the world that supports the animal life of the earth. Although modern man seldom remembers the fact, he could not exist without the plants that harness the sun's energy and manufacture the basic foodstuffs he depends upon for life....The earth's vegetation is part of a web of life in which there are intimate and essential relations between plants and the earth, between plants and other plants, between plants and animals. Sometimes we have no choice but to disturb the relationships, but we should do so thoughtfully - with full awareness that what we do may have consequences remote in time and place."

- Rachel Carson ( 1907-1964 ) Silent Spring 1962

Since our inception, Greenmantle Nursery has adhered to a strictly organic approach to plant cultivation. We use no chemical fertilizers, pesticides, fungicides, or herbicides. To counteract the constant leaching of nutrients caused by our heavy winter rains, we are always working to build up the soil's organic matter. Composted horse manure is our main reliance, occasionally supplemented with natural amendments like fish and kelp meal.

"Put your ego in your compost heap"
The Greenmantle Catalog
© 1983

Plants do respond to timely attention, especially where it comes to water and nutrients. Pests and predator animals impose a challenge that requires constant vigilance. In the end, the old Chinese proverb rings true: The best fertilizer is the footsteps of the farmer.

Our Duchess of Oldenberg Apple Tree (1895-2003)

 

"Human beings, vegetables, or cosmic dust - we all dance to
the mysterious tune intoned in the distance by an invisible piper ."

- Albert Einstein (1879 -1955)

 

All Original Text and
Images © Greenmantle Nursery 2005