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Books > Health, Home & Family > Gardening > Gardening: plants > Fruit & vegetables
Originally published in 1913, this is a wonderfully detailed and
simple guide to, first, growing and then cooking your own
vegetables. A hugely useful tome for the kitchen gardener, written
with simple, easy to follow instructions and hints and tips. Many
of the earliest books, particularly those dating back to the 1900s
and before, are now extremely scarce and increasingly expensive.
Home Farm Books are republishing these classic works in affordable,
high quality, modern editions, using the original text and artwork.
Contents Include: The Kitchen Garden and The Cook Culture and
Recipes - Salad Plants and Salads - Miscellaneous Sauces -
Miscellaneous Soups - Miscellaneous Dishes - Cheese Dishes - Cakes
and Puddings Without Eggs - Cool Drinks - Successional Cropping in
Small Gardens - Little Known Vegetables - Hints on Vegetable
Cooking In Bags
"Wherein the gardener learns how to grow vegetables and the
housewife how to cook them." Originally published in 1937, this is
a wonderfully detailed and simple guide to, first, growing and then
cooking your own vegetables. A hugely useful tome for the kitchen
gardener, written with simple, easy to follow instructions and
hints and tips. Many of the earliest books, particularly those
dating back to the 1900s and before, are now extremely scarce and
increasingly expensive. Home Farm Books are republishing these
classic works in affordable, high quality, modern editions, using
the original text and artwork. Contents Include: Introduction By C.
H. Middleton - Introduction By Ambrose Heath - General Cultivation
- Enemies Of The Kitchen Garden - An ABC of Vegetables - Salad
Vegetables - Garden Herbs - Vegetable Dishes - A Few Vegetable
Soups - Salad, Raw and Cooked - Herbs - Index - Index To French
Recipes - Index To Latin Names
A kitchen garden, or potager, is a celebration of the seasons:
brimming with vegetables, herbs, flowers, and even fruit trees,
it's our link with nature and a source for fresh produce. The
kitchen garden has always been an important part of life in the
rural south, at times meaning the difference between being well-fed
or going to bed hungry. In recent times, the kitchen garden has
become fashionable, and now more and more homeowners (in cities,
suburbs, as well as the country) are reaping the delicious rewards
of growing their own food. A kitchen garden needs little more than
a small raised bed, so an aspiring gardener with only a modest
backyard will have plenty of room to get started. Have a sprawling
yard and an appetitie for an agricultural adventure? The kitchen
gardener can try his hand at some produce requiring a little more
space: fruit trees, corn, or pumpkins. Starting with location and
soil preparation (where most gardens thrive or fail), authors
William D. Adams and Thomas R. LeRoy will take you ste-by-step into
the world of the southern kitchen garden. Planting guides for each
fruit and vegetable, useful information on propogation and
pest-control, recipes scattered throughout, and Adams' own
beautiful photography make The Southern Kitchen Garden truly
essential reading for all gardeners ready to bring along their
produce from seed to the supper table.
Originally published in the late 1800s, this is a delightful book
on gardening that still contains much information of relevance to
today's gardeners. Many of the earliest books, particularly those
dating back to the 1900s and before, are now extremely scarce and
increasingly expensive. Home Farm Books are republishing these
classic works in affordable, high quality, modern editions, using
the original text and artwork Contents Include - The General
Management of the Garden - Lawns, Paths, Beds, and Border On the
Duty of Making Experiments - Some Neglected but Handsome Plants -
The Conservatory and Greenhouse - The Tool Shed and Summer House -
Roses and Aateurs - Enimies of the Garden - The Rockery - Trees,
and How to Treat them - Shrubs- The Inns and outs of Gardening -
The Profitable Portion - Annuels and Biennials - Window-Boxes -
Table Decoration - The Propagation of Plants - The Management of
Room Plants - Various Hints
"Fruit can be grown almost anywhere" says Mr. Bush, "if you are
prepared to take the trouble" . However, quite often the most
intelligent and ardent gardener can go wrong simply because the
trouble he takes is ill-directed. This book, first published in
1942 and since twice reprinted and revised, tries to guide the
amateur in the growing of soft fruits. The subject is dealt with
methodically; the general questions of aspect, soil, nursery
material and planting procedure are reviewed first. There follows a
discussion of the specific cultural details associated with the
various soft fruits. The range is wide. Besides the better known
blackberries, loganberries, currants, gooseberries, raspberries,
strawberries, tomatoes and mushrooms, the less familiar figs,
outdoor grapes, mulberries, cranberries, barberries, melons and
passion fruit are included. Other matters are dealt with as well.
The vagaries of temperature and climate, the use of the compost
heap, the need for and practice of spraying are all separately and
exactly explained. There is also a chapter on the pruning of cobs,
a subject of which many horticulturalists fight shy. The perils and
pitfalls which complicate the best laid plans of the most
well-intentioned gardener are here averted. Contents Include: An
Ounce of Practice - Coming Down to Earth - On Choosing Nursery
Stock - Planting Fruit Bushes - Blackberries, Loganberries and
Hybrids - The Black Currant - Red and White Currants - The Fig -
Gooseberries - Grapes out of Doors - The Raspberry - Strawberries -
The Tomato - Some Oddments - Nuts: Cob Nuts, Filberts and Walnuts -
Is Spraying Necessary? - Mushrooms - The Whys and Wherefores of
Spring Frosts - Manuring and CompostHeaps
Charles Dowding draws on his years of experience, to show how easy
it is to start a new vegetable garden. Any plot - whether a
building site, overgrown with weeds or unwanted lawn - can be
turned into a beautiful and productive vegetable area. Charles's
no-nonsense and straightforward advice is the perfect starting
point for the beginner or experienced gardener. The book takes you
step-by-step through: * Planning and early stages * Clearing the
ground * Mulch - what, why, how? * Minimizing digging * Sowing and
planting across the seasons * Growing in polytunnels and
greenhouses It is filled with labour-saving ideas and the
techniques that Charles uses to garden so successfully and is
illustrated throughout with photos and tales from Charles's first
year in his new vegetable garden.
A vegetable garden is not an option for everyone, and so container
growing has become desirable for people with little outside space
Many have discovered the love of growing houseplants and want to
take their skills to another level; others are inspired by the idea
of growing their own food organically and sustainably. The book
covers all the essentials of growing a range of edible plants in
pots, and meeting each crop's specific needs. Author Claire Ratinon
brings her urban food growing expertise to this popular subject, in
a book designed to appeal to new gardeners and anyone who would
like to take on the rewarding challenge of growing their own
dinner, even if they've only got a window box or balcony to work
with.
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Veg Patch
(Hardcover)
Mark Diacono
1
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R497
R454
Discovery Miles 4 540
Save R43 (9%)
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Ships in 9 - 17 working days
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Drawing directly from his experience as an acclaimed climate-change
gardener, and of setting up a kitchen garden from scratch for River
Cottage, Mark explains the practical aspects of organic growing,
introduces us to a whole world of vegetables we may not have
previously considered, and does away with alienating gardening
jargon once and for all. Mark begins with a catalogue of vegetables
that will grow in this country, explaining for each their benefits,
what varieties to go for, dos and don'ts, and popular culinary
uses. He then invites us to create a wish list of foods, and shows
us his own list from his early gardening days. Next, he explains
how to turn this wish list into a coherent kitchen garden plan
appropriate for our space, whether it be a patch of acidic soil, a
roof-top garden or an allotment, whether we put on our wellies in
every free moment or are 'time-poor' gardeners. Then he puts all
the theory into practice, showing us how to look after nutrients in
the soil, how to resist pests and diseases, and how to make our
garden sustainable and organic. In clear, concise sections we learn
about seed trays, supporting plants with climbing structures,
mulching, composting, companion planting, irrigation and promoting
pollination, and there are additional tables showing sowing and
harvesting times, plant sizes, and alternative varieties of plants
for different sites.About thirty recipes and a directory of useful
addresses finish the book, and the handbook is complemented by
bright colour photography throughout. Practical and inspiring, with
a textured hard cover and an introduction by Hugh
Fearnley-Whittingstall, "Veg Patch" is destined to join Handbooks
No. 1, 2 and 3 as an indispensible household reference.
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