Los Angeles Times

WHERE THEY’RE MEANT TO BE

FATHER-AND-SON NURSERY OWNERS CREATE FANCY GARDENS, BUT NOTHING STOPS THE QUESTIONS

- BY JEANETTE MARANTOS

YO U ’ R E S O far beyond all that race stuff.”

The comment stopped Logan Williams cold. The Beverly Hills High School grad was selling vegetable plants to a regular customer at his Silver Lake nursery, Logan’s Gardens, the business his father, Jimmy Williams, started some 19 years earlier.

It was June 2, and elsewhere in Los Angeles, large groups were peacefully protesting the police actions that led to the death of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s eight days earlier. Others had resorted to vandalism and looting in Hollywood, Fairfax, Santa Monica and downtown Los Angeles.

Logan and his father are African American and, as far as they know, the only black nursery owners in Southern California, but they didn’t join the protests. Like most nursery owners, they’ve been way too busy. Their business has more than doubled this spring as demand for vegetable plants has soared.

Moreover, Logan and Jimmy also build and maintain custom gardens for the rich and famous around Los Angeles, and their phone hasn’t stopped ringing since mid-March, when people stuck at home due to coronaviru­s concerns became eager to start gardening.

So the protests and George Floyd were all jumbled with a lot of other things in Logan’s mind that day as he and his white customer finished their transactio­n and chatted about current events.

And that’s when the customer said, “You know, Logan, you’re so far beyond all that race stuff.”

Logan said he didn’t sleep well that night, and the next morning, when he woke at 4:45 a.m. to prepare plants for their bi-weekly sales at the Santa Monica Farmers Market, he took a moment to post a personal story on Instagram, something he rarely does.

On the Instagram post, you can see Logan grimace as he recalls this story. “I guess to him, I was just some well-to-do black dude who was beyond all this stuff going on in the world,” he says on the post, “but as a black person, and particular­ly a black person in America, I know you can never be beyond that race stuff.”

I asked father and son to discuss their thoughts on this moment in Los Angeles and to share some of their experience­s as African American men living and working across the city. In a phone interview that took place shortly after his social media posting, Logan shared that he enjoyed a rarefied upbringing. He said he went to schools in Beverly Hills because his mother was the top sales person and interior designer at the Polo Ralph Lauren store on Rodeo Drive.

He recalls a wait-a-minute moment with one of his close white friends at the Beverly Center, when they were around 20. They went into a shoe store to buy something, he said, and when he pulled out his credit card, the sales clerk asked to see his ID.

Logan thought that was normal, that everybody had to show their ID to make a credit card purchase, but his friend was surprised. “He said, ‘Logan, do they check your ID every time you pay with a card?’ because he’d never been checked when he paid with a card .... That’s when he realized how race affects things.”

That comment, about being “beyond all that race stuff,” has dredged up too many memories, he said, of events that affected him and his father.

Like the spring of 2018 when he went to a longtime customer’s home in the Hollywood Hills to plant her spring garden. He finished around 1 p.m. and then climbed inside his work van to write an invoice.

“I was just sitting there, looking down at a sheet of paper with a calculator in my hand when all of a sudden I hear someone slapping the hood of the car,” he said.

“I see this guy glaring at me ... but before I can react he literally shouts at me, ‘Who are you? What are you doing? I have security concerns!’ ”

Logan said he didn’t know what to say or do. “The only thing I could think of to say was, ‘I’m working’ in a perturbed voice, and he just walked away.

“But as I was sitting there, shaken, it hit me then: I had this silver calculator in my hand. What if I’d raised my hand and what if he had a gun and shot me because he thought I was going to shoot him? And that’s something that sticks with you.”

AND THERE WAS the time in 2015 when Logan, 34, and his then 74-year-old father treated themselves to a workday lunch at El Caserio in Silver Lake, one of their favorite restaurant­s. A few moments after they left the parking lot, he said, they were pulled over by an unmarked police car.

“The officer doesn’t even ask a question,” Logan said. “He just makes one of those openended statements: ‘We’ve been having trouble with robberies in the area,’ and left that hanging out there, as if we had any informatio­n for him; two black guys in a truck, so we’re robbers now or something? I mean, what response can you make to that?”

His father told them, “‘Look, I’m a gardener,’ ” They checked his ID, and then we were let go.

Then there was the time in the mid-1990s in their Larchmont Village neighborho­od. His father often saw a neighbor gardening, and they would occasional­ly talk about plants, so one day, Jimmy Williams put a plant in a brown paper bag to take it over as a surprise.

“He’s literally a guy bringing a tomato to somebody the next street over when two LAPD officers pull over and ask him, ‘What’s in the bag?’ ” Logan said.

They’re all unrelated incidents, he says, except they’re not: “He was literally just walking with a plant . ... In all three instances we were doing something around plants, and even that was not enough to protect us. It’s just part of being black in America; at some point you’re going to feel it. You can either block it out, keep working, and move forward or sit there and be upset. You don’t have an option, and you feel bad either direction you go. It’s just an added burden.”

Jimmy is 79 now. He wants to talk about how well his business is doing, the son he’s so proud of and his new recipe for pickled zucchini (you have to use apple cider vinegar, not white vinegar). He said his great-grandmothe­r was a slave in South Carolina, a decendant of people renowned for farming even before they were brought to America. Everything he knows about gardening, he said, was passed down through his family.

He’s sympatheti­c with the protestors today, but he doesn’t think they’ll change much. “When these things happen that involve racism, the rich white people are not affected by it,” he said. “They just turn their backs and wait until it goes away... they’re the ones who have to make the change.”

Logan sees it a little differentl­y. “My dad’s seen every protest march since the civil rights movement started, and it’s gotten to the point where he’s seen people marching a jillion times. You can ask for this or that until you’re blue in the face, but that’s doesn’t mean anything is going to change.”

Logan thinks the answer may partly be in education. “We really need to reform the way black history is taught in conjunctio­n with American history,” he said. “Maybe if we explained the contributi­ons a little better, the different races would have more respect for each other.”

But mostly, Logan said, he thinks the changes will come from individual­s making decisions every day. One of his white friends messaged him after George Floyd was killed.

“She said, ‘What can I really do to help, other than say“I’m sorry” or “Black Lives Matter”?’

“And I told her, ‘Just keep doing what you’re already doing. Part of what helps is when you genuinely value black people for who they are and what they do. Spend a couple bucks at black businesses and tell your friends about them. Really, just treat us the way everybody wants to be treated. That’s where it starts and it helps so so much ... you’ll never be able to really know.’ ”

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Al Seib Los Angeles Times

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