
HERSHEY, Pa. — Nora Palmer is a gardener who toils happily in breezy Hershey Gardens, a playground of roses, herbs, old trees and leafy spaces that welcomes, among others, field-tripping grade-schoolers.
“I’ve just finished weeding and mulching here,” she says as she walks through a children’s garden where three fountains, formed as Hershey’s Kisses, whistle as they spout.
Palmer, 21, seems to have gotten off the roller coaster of young adulthood a long time ago, if she ever was on it. She decided in high school, to the bemusement of her guidance counselors, that she was going to be a professional gardener. All is going to plan.
But horticulture is facing its own crisis. As older plant growers, nursery managers and groundskeepers reach retirement age, there are too few Nora Palmers arriving to replace them.
Latest from Garden Center
- NewGen Boxwood added to Proven Winners ColorChoice line
- Terra Nova releases new echinacea variety, 'Fringe Festival'
- Sakata Seed America celebrates renovation of Cal Poly greenhouse complex
- American Horticultural Society names winners of 2025 AHS Book Awards
- American Horticultural Society announces winners of 2025 Great American Gardeners Awards
- Ask HR: We got a bad review after an employee having a bad day snapped at a customer. What do I do?
- How to cultivate connections with vendors
- The Growth Industry Episode 3: Across the Pond with Neville Stein