New Leaf open until Dec. 18
New Leaf Garden Center owner Laurie Laird is ready to stop working 50-60 hours per week: “It’s time to stop and smell the roses,” she told the Bluffton Icon and Ada Icon. Laird has been the sole owner of the garden center at 0395 State Route 235 since 1991. This year, she sold the Ada location to a business yet to be announced. At the 927 E Columbus St., Kenton location, new owners will begin operating the shop in 2022.
During the remainder of 2021, the Ada store is having a garage sale of shelving and miscellaneous equipment. Both shops are having a fall planting sale of plants, shrubs and trees. Fall decor and spring blooming bulbs (tulips, etc.) are currently 25% off. Shop hours at both locations are 9:00 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Monday-Friday and 9:00 a.m.-4:00 p.m. Saturday.
Both stores will be open until Dec. 18 with cut Christmas trees, fresh cut greens, and decorations. The annual Christmas open house is November 13 in Ada and Kenton.
New Leaf has shared its monthly newsletter with 2,000 customers in 9 counties. During 30 years in business, the garden center has provided retail and landscaping services, as well as:
Advice to garden clubs, service clubs, 4-H and Homemakers clubs
Planted trees for towns, townships and cemeteries
Loaned plants for school functions, provided plants for school fundraisers
Held Spring Garden Seminars for over 20 years
Displayed at the Hardin County fair for 30 years and inducted into the Hardin Co. Agricultural Hall of Fame, 2013
Laird thanks her staff for their contributions: “I could not have done this without my employees. Between both stores and landscape crew, we have hired up to 25 people in the busy months. Tom Boehm, my head landscape foreman, designer and estimator has been with me the longest, 40 years. He also will be pursuing a different and easier endeavor.”
In 2020, perhaps because of Covid, New Leaf had one of its best years and 2021 sales are expected to be even better.
When asked how the business has changed, Laird commented. “Brand names, products are completely different. I found a plant list from 1988 and I was just laughing because most of those plants we just don’t carry anymore. It’s all new plant material, different varieties, low maintenance, lots of color.” She also notes that plant sizes have been made smaller. What hasn’t changed? Laird chuckles, “You’ve still got to water them.”
Stories Posted This Week
Sunday, February 23, 2025
Saturday, February 22, 2025
- Pirate Bowlus competes in state backstroke consolation finals
- James Arden Emmert was a kidney dialysis technician
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- Pirate boys basketball win sectional vs. Wayne Trace
- Pirate Bowlus advances to OHSAA swim final, Downey swims in prelims
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- Bluffton University public events for March 2025
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- Lions Club inducts five new members, announces LEO Club charter night
Friday, February 21, 2025
Thursday, February 20, 2025
- Bluffton Beavers sports roundup, Feb. 12-18
- Special meeting of Bluffton School Board includes land purchase
- Pirates Grandey, Donaldson and Sommers earn district hoop honors
- BAMA donates $700 in tissues to Bluffton Schools
- Village of Bluffton snow safety reminders
- Chamber update: Board representatives and 2025 Chocolate Walk
- Let it Go: Helping control viral infections
Wednesday, February 19, 2025
- George N. Stultz was a business administrator
- Joyce Carolyn LaRue was a homemaker and seamstress
- Ticket information for section wrestling on February 22
- Tickets and livestream information for February 21 sectional boys basketball
- Bluffton businesses spotlighted at February chamber breakfast
- Tickets now on sale for March 21 Music Boosters Chicken BBQ
- Conservation Tillage and Technology Conference March 11-12
- Bluffton Forum speaker to focus on UF History