|
Books > Health, Home & Family > Gardening > Gardening: plants > Fruit & vegetables
Do you love living in the city but dream about growing your own wholesome fruit and vegetables? South Africa’s organic gardening guru, Jane Griffiths, shows you just how easy it is to achieve a flourishing food garden, no matter how small your space.
Jane’s Delicious Urban Gardening is packed with inspirational ideas and practical information on all aspects of urban eco living.
In her trademark sensible and easy-to-follow style, Jane provides a wealth of tips and suggestions for:
- growing organic vegetables just about anywhere – from containers to edible walls, from raised beds to rooftops, from community gardens to neglected pavements
- planting and maintaining a space-efficient urban orchard
- converting an existing lawn or tennis court into an instant edible oasis
- keeping urban bees, hens and aquaponic tanks
- harvesting rainwater and recycling grey water
- introducing solar power into your home
- converting a chlorinated swimming pool into a wetland-filtered haven.
Illustrated with hundreds of beautiful colour photographs, Jane’s Delicious Urban Gardening is essential reading for anyone wanting to live a more sustainable, productive and healthy lifestyle in the city.
A beginners' guide to growing wild food in pots, making foraging easy.
The Flowerpot Forager details 30 wild edible plants that can be grown at home in containers with as much effort as you'd put into your tending your herb pot from the supermarket, plus a very simple recipe or two on how to use them—think pink clover lemonade, water mint pesto and dandelion salad. Foraging is a perennially aspirational hobby for gardeners and cooks alike, but it's now entering the mainstream; from supermarkets stocking wild garlic to Fever Tree spiking their tonics with elderflower, wild food is everywhere.
Historically, location has hampered the accessibility of foraging—if you don't live near a wood, riverbed or meadow, it can be difficult to find those lusted-after ingredients in cookbooks and on TV shows. But The Flowerpot Forager is here to solve that.
|
Pears
(Hardcover)
James Frederick Timothy Arbury; Illustrated by Sally Pinhey
|
R50
Discovery Miles 500
|
Ships in 12 - 17 working days
|
|
The second book by this author. The first was a true life,
historical story of a families tragedies and triumphs. This is a
romp through Rural England, a land of allotmenteers and would be
naughty councillors. Of good triumphing over not so good.
Master the art of edible gardening in the beautiful southwestern
United States."Southwest Fruit & Vegetable Gardening" is
written exclusively for gardeners who want to grow edibles in
Arizona, New Mexico, or Nevada. Author Jacqueline Soule shares her
bountiful knowledge of edibles in general and the Southwest region
in particular, equipping you with all the information you need to
design your edible garden, tend the soil, maintain your plants
throughout their life cycles, and--most importantly--harvest the
delicious foods they produce. So whether you live in the Tucson
suburbs, the New Mexico Bootheel, the Mojave Desert, or anywhere
else in the southwestern tri-state area, you'll discover the best
fruit and vegetable plants for your garden in this beautiful
step-by-step how-to guide . . . and before you know it you'll have
delicious fresh fruits and vegetables on your table.
In this continuing series, the topic of vegetables embraces a wide
range of pieces from English, American and overseas scholars. Their
treatments encompass both a broader consideration of the vegetable
diet and the history of the cultivation and consumption of specific
varieties. Cookery and consumption are not highlighted at the
expense of cultivation, so there are some interesting essays on
allotments, market gardening in the Paris region, early-modern
vegetable gardening in England and the development of markets in
India. The theme has been treated with admirable latitude in
contributions on vegetables and diplomacy, vegetable carving, and
vegetables in Renaissance art. Essays include: (Don't) Eat Your
Vegetables: A Historical Semiotics of Carving Legumes (Julia
Abramson); The War of Vegetables: The Rise & Fall of the
English Allotment Movement (Lesley Acton); The First Scientific
Defense of a Vegetarian Diet (Ken Albala); Mukimono & Modoki:
Japan's Culinary Trompe l'oeil (Elizabeth Andoh); The Bitter - and
Flatulent - Aphrodisiac: Synchrony and Diachrony of the Culinary
Use of Muscari Comosum in Greece and Italy' (Anthony Buccini); Eat
Your Greens: Traditional Leafy Vegetables for Better Nutrition
(Jeremy Cherfas); 'We Talked About the Aubergines: Some Minor
Pleasures of European Diplomacy (Andrew Dalby); Akkoub ( Gundelia
Tournefortii - Tournefort's gundelia): An Edible Wild Thistle from
the Lebanese Mountains (Anissa Helou); Is There Salvation in
Sweetness? Sugar Beets in America (Cathy Kaufman); The Potato in
Irish Cuisine and Culture (Mairtin Mac Con Iomaire & Padraic Og
Gallagher); Sweet As Notes on the Kumara or New Zealand Sweet
Potato as a Taonga, or Treasure (Ray McVinnie); Wild Thing: The
Naga Morich Story (Michael & Joy Michaud); 'Per rape et porri
et per spinachi': Re-examining the Realities of Vegetable
Consumption at the Monastery of Santa Trinita in Post-Plague
Florence (Salvatore Musumeci); Les Maraichers - Market Gardeners of
the Ile de France (Lizbeth Nicol); Keeping the Home Fires Burning:
Culinary Exchanges, Sustainability and Traditional Vegetable
Markets in India (Krina Patel); The Los Angeles Vegetable Cult
(Charles Perry); From the Plate to the Palate: Visual Delights from
the Vegetable Kingdoms of Italy (Gillian Riley); But Did the
English Eat Their Vegetables? A Look at English Kitchen Gardens and
the Vegetable Cookery they Imply, 1650-1800 (William Rubel);
Renaissance Italy and the Fabulous, Flamboyant Inslata (June di
Schino); Pomtajer (Karin Vaneker); A Vegetable Zodiac from Late
Antique Alexandria (Susan Weingarten).
James Gregory, a seedsman from the early 1800, describes and
details his methods and experiences of growing onions commercially.
The information contained in the book is just as relevant today to
gardeners with vegetable plots and allotments, as it was to the
commercial growers of the time. His advice on soil types, manure,
sowing and planting, hoeing and weeding will help any vegetable
grower achieve good crops without the use of modern chemical
applications.
In one affordable polytunnel, kitchen-garden guru Joyce Russell
shows you how to grow vegetables easily, organically and abundantly
so that you have something to eat every month of the year. Whether
you are a beginner or more experienced, this comprehensive,
practical, month-by-month guide to polytunnel gardening has got
everything you need, telling you exactly what to do and when to do
it, in order to grow the best fruit and vegetables all-year-round.
From preparing the site to making a hotbed, from composts and
organic feeds to identifying and coping with pests, plus
information on how to get the best from each crop and
month-to-month planting plans for year-round growing, The
Polytunnel Book provides a wealth of practical tips and techniques
as well as celebrating what can be achieved. Illustrated with 300
stunning colour photographs, this practical guide to polytunnels
hand guides you through each month of the year, ensuring the best
results all year round.
Grow-your-own food fans will be delighted to hear that it's
possible to have tasty, homegrown mushrooms to eat every month of
the year. This easy-to-follow, practical book explains how to grow
them in the garden, balcony, kitchen or cellar. Mushrooms are an
organic, sustainable and delicious form of plant nutrition and
fungi experts Magdalena Wurth and Herbert Wurth take you through
every step of the cultivation process. Learn how to grow 19
different mushroom helped along by clear tables, drawings and
photographs. Whether you start mushroom growing outdoors on tree
stumps and straw bales or indoors using compost or a kit, these
tried-and-tested methods make this the ultimate book on small-scale
mushroom growing.
In a fast-paced world with mega upheaval, including climate crises
and a global pandemic, the allure of growing your own food, being
self-sufficient, and living green is immense. This yearning for not
being wholly reliant on the supermarket, and the growing concerns
over pesticides and food miles has led to the resurgence in seeking
old-world skills. As showcased in Urban Homesteads, the benefits of
a productive garden on your doorstep or within arm's reach, tending
to chickens, harvesting your own honey, and using eco-friendly
water-harvesting techniques are clear: fresh herbs, vegetables, and
fruit on tap, fresh eggs, delicious honey; plus living at a slower
pace, better value for money, and a more soothing and mindful
existence. Of course, a healthy garden and environment also
attracts beneficial insects and birds. Get inspired with this
book's range of eco-friendly possibilities from around the globe.
With beautiful full-colour photos, gathered here are stories of
people who have set up their own productive and abundant back yard
or patio, as well as examples of great vertical planters, indoor
gardens, and those who have reached into the urban community
allotment. Use this book to start your own journey with an urban
homestead lifestyle, with lots of generous tips, modern green
concepts as well as a twist of modern, technically savvy know-how.
All the practical guidance you need on how to be the change you
want to see.
|
|