Gardening Supplies Columbia SC

Gardening supplies include nursery pots, grow bags, hydroponic systems, potting mixes, pest control, house plant food, peat moss, plant grow lights, and many more. See below for local business in Columbia that give access to gardening supplies as well as advice and content on gardening tools and gardening books.

Rebekahs Garden Inc.
(803) 783-1994
1001 Bluff Road
Columbia, SC
Products / Services
Groundcovers, Perennials, Plants, Shrubs, Trees

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Case Plants
(803) 799-3301
1001 Bluff Road
Columbia, SC
Products / Services
Annuals, Garden Centers / Nurseries, Groundcovers, Perennials, Plants, Shrubs, Trees

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Seven Oaks Plant Shop
(803) 772-3330
4522 St. Andrews Road
Columbia, SC
Products / Services
Annuals, Arrangement Accessories, Baskets & Wicker Containers, Bulbs, Ceramic, Terra Cotta & Stone Containers, Chemicals, Containers, Containers - Decorative, Crop Protection, Garden Center Marketing, Garden Centers / Nurseries, Garden Ornaments, Giftware, Greenhouse Growers, Groundcovers, Herbs, Horticulture Companies, Houseplants, Mulch, Perennials, Plants, Pottery, Roses, Seeds, Shrubs, Trees

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Mill Creek Greenhouses
(803) 776-0441
2324 Leesburg Road
Columbia, SC
Products / Services
Groundcovers, Perennials, Plants, Shrubs, Trees

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Woodley's Garden Center
(803) 407-0601
2840 Dreher Shoals Road
Columbia, SC
Products / Services
Groundcovers, Perennials, Plants, Shrubs, Trees

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Rebekah's Garden , Inc
(803) 799-0660
Sc Farmers Market 1001 Bluff Road
Columbia, SC
Products / Services
Annuals

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Lake Murray Landscape Supply
(803) 732-4101
1637 Lake Murray Blvd
Columbia, SC
Products / Services
Rubber Mulch

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Garners Ferry Landscape Supply
(803) 783-4717
7726 Garners Ferry Road
Columbia, SC

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Woodley's Garden Center
(803) 788-1487
10015 Two Notch Road
Columbia, SC
Products / Services
Annuals, Aquatics, Arrangement Accessories, Benches / Chairs / Tables, Bulbs, Cactus / Succulent, Ceramic, Terra Cotta & Stone Containers, Chemicals, Christmas Lighting, Christmas Ornaments & Decorations, Christmas Trees, Christmas Trees - Cut, Christmas Trees - Live B&B, Christmas Trees - Live Container, Conifers / Evergreens, Container Gardening, Container Plants, Containers, Containers - Decorative, Decorative Planters & Urns, Ferns, Fountains - Decorative, Fruits, Furniture / Structures, …

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Reese's Plants
(803) 691-3035
10418 Wilson Blvd
Blythewood, SC
Products / Services
Annuals

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Agriculture Projects

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By Alicia Sparks


Midweek Mental Greening

Although I don’t live near it anymore, one of the things I love about my old city’s community mental health center is the center’s greenhouse. The center’s patients, or clients, grow and sell the flowers, ferns, and other plants within the greenhouse and any money raised goes toward the continuing operation of the center’s various programs.

I don’t have any firsthand experience with the center’s greenhouse (although I do keep promising myself to stop in the next time I’m in the city), but I’ve heard great things about it. Of course, that’s not surprising. We already know how mentally and emotionally beneficial activities like gardening can be (and if you need a refresher course, check out Thrive’s Carry on Gardening website , including the group’s Harnessing the Mood-Boosting Power of Gardening leaflet).

I’ve seen and read about numerous other projects similar to the one my former city’s community mental health center runs. Some mental health centers operate greenhouses packed with flowers, ferns, and other plants while others, like Anderson, Indiana’s Center for Mental Health’s community-supported agriculture farm (which, incidentally, was just awarded the 2009 Award of Excellence in Community Collaboration by the National Council for Community Behavioral Healthcare in San Antonio, Texas) manage vegetable gardens.

My point is this isn’t exactly a new idea, but it’s one that’s spreading across the world, and for good reason.

What is new, however (well, to me anyway) is a new study from England’s University of Bristol and University College London. According to Medical News Today :

UK scientists suggest that a type of friendly bacteria found in soil may affect the brain in a similar way to antidepressants .

Their findings are published in the early online edition of the journal Neuroscience.

Researchers from Bristol University and University Col...

Click here to read the rest of this article from Pysch Central