One Nature
PLANT NURSERY, CONSTRUCTION & CONSULTING. Nursery open 10-6, Wed-Sun, from April 1 to 10/31. We also provide workshops for DIY environmentalists.
We grow and sell more-than-organic native, edible, and medicinal plants. Our team is a small interdisciplinary team of artists, applied ecologists, botanists, scientists, and planners capable of stewarding client projects from initial visioning and research through construction and into long-term land stewardship. Certified B Corp.
06/05/2026
We just made our final payment on a $100,000 loan from Pursuit Lending that we received during COVID.
The 3% interest rate — which feels almost unbelievable these days — was critical for our small business at a very uncertain time.
Community Development Financial Institutions like Pursuit are so important for small businesses, especially when access to affordable capital is often limited and concentrated in ways that don’t serve smaller, community-rooted companies.
We’re grateful to the amazing team at Pursuit for their support, and proud to mark this milestone.
What Is a Community Development Financial Institution (CDFI)? | Pursuit CDFIs are about more than just lending. They’re here to help your small business grow! Learn how they can take your small business to new heights.
06/05/2026
For two or three years, we stopped selling plugs in our nursery because, frankly, we can make more money selling gallon and quart containers. The consequence, however, was that many of our customers couldn’t afford the herbaceous material we had in stock.
So last year, we started selling plugs again. This is another example of how we tweak our nursery business model over time to help achieve our environmental agenda.
We recently received a couple of new shipments from some of our trade partners and now have an abundant supply of low-cost material that’s ready and eager to be planted in your garden.
When planting plugs, it’s best to space them a little closer together and expect a slightly higher percentage of dieback than with more established plants. If you plant them this month at the appropriate spacing, by fall you’ll have something that looks a lot like a meadow.
06/04/2026
We work hard to keep our nursery’s prices as low as possible so we can achieve our mission: getting healthy, native, edible, and medicinal plants into the hands of as many people in our community as possible.
Keeping prices low isn’t easy. We are committed to paying livable wages, prioritizing employee well-being, maintaining a chemical-free growing environment, and supporting nonprofit partners through charitable giving. These values are central to who we are, but they also add costs that many large-scale growers and retailers don’t carry.
Over the past 10 years, we’ve become increasingly efficient, working closely with our propagation partners, growers, and making smart logistical decisions to provide the best value we can. Even so, we may never be able to match the prices you’ll find at Home Depot, Lowes or Adams.
Price tags also don’t tell the whole story. Much of the nursery stock sold in our region is grown elsewhere- in chemical dripping operations in warmer climates where labor costs are lower and worker conditions are not always ideal. We believe the people who grow plants deserve fair wages, safe working conditions, and respect for their work. Ethical labor practices are an important part of how we choose our partners and run our nursery.
What we can offer is something different: vigorous, healthy, non-toxic plants grown with care and integrity. Our growing methods meet or exceed USDA Organic standards, and every purchase helps support a healthier local ecosystem and stronger community.
If you’re looking for plants that are good for people, pollinators, and the planet, you’ve come to the right place.
06/03/2026
Golden hour photos from our demonstration garden. We have over 120 species (and counting) of plants! Built entirely from small-sized container plants and using low cost materials, this garden is designed to showcase many affordable options that help move suburbia from an ecological problem to a solution.
05/31/2026
5 Things About Foxglove Beardtongue (Penstemon digitalis)
1. It is a nectar station. The tubular white flowers attract native bees, butterflies, and hummingbirds, making it an important nectar source during late spring and early summer. In flower essence traditions, Foxglove Beardtongue is sometimes associated with encouraging clear communication, self-expression, and confidence in sharing one’s voice.
2. Herbalists use it to help speak truth.Several Penstemon species have a history of use by Indigenous peoples and traditional herbal practitioners. In flower essence traditions, Foxglove Beardtongue is sometimes associated with encouraging clear communication, self-expression, and confidence in sharing one’s voice.
3. Gardeners use it to strengthen ecosystem function.Foxglove Beardtongue attracts beneficial insects, increases pollinator activity, and supports biodiversity, making it a useful perennial in food forests, pollinator strips, and native plant guilds.
4. Unlike James Hardin, the “beard” is the real deal.Inside each flower is a fuzzy sterile stamen called a staminode. This distinctive feature gives beardtongues their common name and helps distinguish them from similar wildflowers.
5. It is tough and adaptable.Native to eastern North America, Foxglove Beardtongue tolerates drought, deer, adapts to a range of soil conditions, and reliably returns year after year with minimal care.
05/31/2026
We retrofitted this shade garden with a stepping-stone entry leading to a bluestone spiral patio, all without disturbing a single existing plant. The spiral unfolds subtly, beginning with larger stones and gradually transitioning to smaller pieces as it tightens toward the center. Spirals have a unique ability to draw us inward, creating a sense of movement, discovery, and quiet contemplation. Echoing patterns found in fern fronds, nautilus shells, whirlpools, and even galaxies, the form feels both timeless and organic. By inviting visitors to slow down and experience the garden from ever-changing perspectives, the spiral transforms the space into something immersive, intimate, and quietly captivating. One of the most rewarding aspects of this project was working within a modest budget. Constraints often force artists and builders to distinguish between what is essential and what is merely expensive. The challenge becomes finding substitutions, simplifications, and creative solutions that do not feel like compromises once they are built. In many ways, this mirrors the larger task of ecologically retrofitting suburbia. If sustainable landscapes depend on costly interventions available only to a small number of homeowners, they cannot achieve meaningful scale. Lasting change requires landscapes that are beautiful, functional, and attainable. The goal is not to create the most expensive solution possible, but one that people can realistically adopt—where thoughtful choices replace excess, and where the final result feels richer because of the constraints rather than diminished by them.
05/31/2026
We just received a new shipment of pawpaws (Asimina triloba) at the nursery.
Often called North America’s largest native fruit, the pawpaw is a truly remarkable tree. It belongs to the custard apple family (Annonaceae), a mostly tropical lineage that dates back to the age of dinosaurs. Its large fruits are thought to have evolved alongside Ice Age megafauna such as mastodons and giant ground sloths, making it one of the most fascinating native fruit trees you can grow.
That said, pawpaws aren’t always easy. In the wild, they regenerate through root suckers and seeds protected by rich forest soils and leaf litter. Young trees are sensitive to drought, intense sun, and temperature extremes during their first year or two. Once established, however, they become tough, resilient trees that can thrive for decades.
In this photo, we’re establishing a new orchard in Ulster County, near the northern edge of the pawpaw’s historic (but changing) range. We use shade cloth on the south side of deer cages to protect the seedlings from summer sun, irrigation bags to keep them hydrated when we’re away, and (in the first winter) straw mulch to help them through to spring.
If you’re considering a pawpaw, make sure you’re prepared to give it the attention it needs during establishment. It’s one of the most rewarding native fruit trees we grow—but also one of the species most likely to struggle if planted and forgotten.
05/31/2026
Everyone should know about the work being done by at the Sanctuary Healing Gardens on Crystal Lake, and beyond. Newburgh Sanctuary is “a BIPOC centered healing garden rooted in love, justice and care for the earth. Transforming public land since 2020 into flourishing spaces of nourishment, healing and belonging.“ They just picked up a bunch of plants from our nursery for a community planting this Sunday. Visit their instagram account to learn more about them and sign up to help!
05/31/2026
This year, One Nature celebrates 10 years as a Certified B Corporation.
So, what is a B Corp?
Certified B Corporations, or B Corps, are companies verified as meeting standards for social and environmental performance, transparency, and accountability.
For One Nature, certification means more than a badge. It means our purpose and plans for positive impact are embedded in our team's DNA, helping us stay aware of our impact on people and the planet in all we do.
B Corps are part of a global movement of companies doing business differently. According to B Lab Global’s annual reports, B Corps are:
• 3.1x more likely to measure social and environmental performance through defined KPIs
• 3.7x more likely to embed social and environmental goals in key decisions
• 2.6x more likely to hold managers accountable for mission alignment
We’re proud to meet B Lab’s integrated social, environmental, and governance standards — and grateful to everyone who has helped us carry this commitment forward since 2016.
Here’s to 10 years as a B Corp, and to the work still ahead.
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Address
3 Old Glenham Road
Beacon, NY
12508
Opening Hours
| Wednesday | 10am - 6pm |
| Thursday | 10am - 6pm |
| Friday | 10am - 6pm |
| Saturday | 10am - 6pm |
| Sunday | 10am - 6pm |
06/05/2026