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Books > Health, Home & Family > Gardening
Discover how to create a weed-free, sustainable, abundant garden
with the no-till gardening method! The no-dig or no-till gardening
method is an easy and climate-smart technique that is gaining in
popularity and revolutionizing the gardening world. This book
teaches you everything you need to start and care for a kitchen
garden without any digging, watering, or weeding. Too good to be
true? Find out for yourself! No-dig gardening is better for the
environment, easier on your back, and yields abundant vegetables,
herbs, and flowers. Learn everything you need to get started! Layer
your garden properly (the lasagna method) Choose the right cover
materials When to plant seedlings and when to direct sow How to
compost Learn about permaculture techniques Attract the good
insects and repel the unwanted ones Recognize common plant diseases
Chock-full of practical tips and designed with gorgeous photos
throughout, this is your guide to a healthy, eco-friendly, abundant
garden.
The Montana Gardener's Companion explains how to identify and
address common shortcomings of Montana soils, including alkaline
soils (the most common soil in Montana), acidic soils (found in
some soils in the mountains and near Great Falls), and salty soils
(found especially in eastern Montana and in areas west and
northwest of Great Falls east of the Divide and in the far
northeastern portions of Sheridan County). This book explains the
different climates of eastern and western Montana, the effect of
elevation on growing seasons, and how Montana gardeners can
lengthen their growing seasons through careful plant selection,
choosing the correct exposure, planting properly on slopes and
using season-extending products.
Gardening doesn't have to be nice. At the beginning of the
twenty-first century the gardens with the most contemporary feel
revel in a crisp, clean style with harder planting and landscaping,
and a water-wise attitude. In Sharp Gardening, Christopher Holliday
looks at the role of architectural foliage, and how it can be used
to provide accents in planting schemes, and also as the main
substance of gardens. Jerry Harpur's stunning photographs show-
case both spiky plants and the gardens that incorporate them most
successfully.
This is a directory of plants whose greatest attributes in the
garden lie in their form and foliage, not merely in their flowers.
Ornamental foliage plants for your garden features over 2000 plants
from all over the world, many of which are useful cultivars,
varieties or forms. They have been selected for their value in the
landscaping of gardens, be they big or small. Their claims to fame
may be their architectural form, their intriguing texture, their
unusual habit, their miniature or immense size, or their
suitability for a particular situation, such as for topiary, a
conservatory or to provide winter colour. Many plants have been
chosen for their striking leaves, which may be patterned, enormous,
dissected or magnificently coloured. Every entry has notes on
cultivation and use, and is coded to correspond with the climatic
zones of the world map at the front of the title. There are at
least 1000 colour photographs and 600 line drawings. Gardeners and
landscapers have become increasingly aware of how easy foliage
plants are to care for and what a magnificent palette they provide
for simple, clean garden design. Many lend themselves to small
formal gardens for urban spaces, while trees and mass plantings can
give perspective and interesting effects in larger gardens. Style
is often a matter of restraint and the judicious use of foliage
plants sometimes brings to a garden a greater sense of peace and
relaxation than one cluttered with colourful flowers.
It has long been observed, by farmers, gardeners and botanists
alike, that from time to time certain plants seem to affect certain
other plants growing their near them -- both favourably and
unfavourably. By taking account of these relationships, farmers and
gardeners can improve the quality of food and flowers, reduce
losses from pests and disease, drought and frost, and enhance both
satisfaction and pleasure in their work and financial profit. Years
of experimentation by Richard Gregg and subsequently Helen
Philbrick and others resulted in this unique reference book. It
offers a detailed and comprehensive A-Z of plants and how they
affect each other and their surrounding environment, including the
soil, insects and birds.
Of the 25,000 known species of bee worldwide, only seven species
are honeybees. Bees and plants have a sophisticated and delicate
symbiosis. In recent years, the shrinking of green spaces has
endangered the honeybee. Now Planting for Honeybees shows you how
you can help these delightful pollinators to flourish by creating a
garden as a habitat for them. No matter how small or large your
space - from a window ledge in the city to a country garden - Sarah
Wyndham Lewis offers practical advice on which plants to grow, and
when and where to plant them. Charmingly illustrated with delicate
drawings, this a jewel of a guide to treasure.
In the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, it seemed to many
that England was being transformed by various kinds of
'improvements' in agriculture and industry, in gardening and the
ornamentation of landscape. Such changes were understood to reflect
matters of the greatest importance in the moral, social and
political arrangements of the country. In the area of landscape
design, to clear a wood, or plant one, to build a folly or a
cottage, to design in the formal style or the picturesque, was to
express a political orientation of one kind or another. To choose
to employ Capability Brown, Humphry Repton or one of their
lesser-known competitors, was to make a statement regarding the
history of England, its constitutional organisation and the
relationships that ought to exist between its citizens. Although
many landowners may have been oblivious to this, there was a large
body of critical opinion, poetry, theology and social discourse
that offered to inform and correct them. In this illuminating and
stimulating book, Nigel Everett reviews the entire debate, from
about 1760 to 1820, emphasising in particular the attempts of
various writers to defend a 'traditional' or tory view of the
landscape against the aggressive, privatising tendency of
improvement. Challenging the narrow implications of the existing
schools of landscape historians - the 'establishment' historians,
concerned primarily with currents of 'taste', who ignore the wider
issues involved, and the commentators on the Left who have tended
to see landscape politics as the politics of class - Everett
reveals the history of English landscape as a political struggle
between, on the one hand, the mechanical, universal andimpersonal -
whig - point of view and, on the other, the natural, Christian,
particular and organic point of view. Everett depicts a lively,
intelligent debate regarding the development of English society, as
active among cultivated clergymen and landowners as among the
theoreticians. Furthermore, analysing the languages of tory
political thought, Everett engages in a dialogue between the
present and the past, identifying in the detached, artificial and
utilitarian attitudes of the whig 'improvers' the philosophical and
historical origins of a dominant set of values of the late
twentieth century - most recently expressed in the Conservative
Party - in which the interests of private enterprise and commercial
utility preponderate over any other conception of the public good.
This important and passionate book makes an essential and original
contribution to the study of eighteenth-century cultural history in
Britain.
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The Gardener's Year
(Hardcover)
Karel Capek; Illustrated by Josef Capek; Translated by Marie Weatherall, Robert Weatherall
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R315
Discovery Miles 3 150
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Ships in 12 - 19 working days
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The Gardener's Year is a charming and light-hearted insight into
the life of an amateur gardener. Structured loosely around what to
plant, grow or cultivate each month, Karel Capek takes us on a
rollicking journey through a year in his own small garden. Complete
and unabridged. Part of the Macmillan Collector's Library; a series
of stunning, pocket-sized classics with ribbon markers. These
beautiful books make perfect gifts or a treat for any book lover.
This edition features lively black and white illustrations by Czech
artist Josef Capek and is translated by M. and R. Weatherall. From
making puddles with an untamable hose to sowing luxuriant weeds
instead of grass, Capek reveals how a gardener grows into his
surroundings 'spurred on by each new failure'. Subverting the
tradition of a 'how to' gardening book, he teaches his readers
about the magic of seeds, the perils of planting vegetables and the
thrilling surprises of a rock garden. As the year progresses and
frail buds turn from flowering stems to drooping bulbs and falling
leaves, Capek's small garden buzzes with life, wisdom and humour.
Gardens Illustrated magazine acknowledges that gardeners love
plants and want to know their origins and parentage as well as
details about colour, form and habit. This book brings together 25
of the best plant features from the magazine in one highly
illustrated volume. Written by a band of well-known plant experts,
the profiles include essential information on the provenance of the
each species, helping readers to understand the plant's needs. The
authors have, in many cases, observed the plant growing wild and
all have intimate knowledge of each species and its preferred
environment. performers and curiosities - Plant Profiles opens
gardeners' eyes to the diversity of the plant families featured,
enabling them to introduce new species into their gardens that not
only look at home, but really flourish.
Gardeners from Key West to Lake Okeechobee and on up the coasts
know that gardening advice for the rest of the country just doesn't
apply here. South Florida is unique, and The Art of South Florida
Gardening is uniquely intended for South Florida gardeners, who
have depended on the solid advice in this book since the first
edition came out more than a decade ago. Now it has been updated
with more helpful facts, tips, and advice for the
conservation-conscious gardener of the 21st century, while
maintaining the practical, easygoing attitude South Florida
gardeners have found so comforting over the years. This book still
makes gardening in South Florida inviting and fun, whether you are
an old hand or have just moved hereand even if you have never
before considered getting your hands dirty. Harold's warm, wise
voice is always encouraging and enthusiastic, and Coralee's lively
engaging prose will have you reading as much for pleasure as for
its valuable information.
Mildred and Arthur Byne explored exceptional Spanish gardens in the
1920s, sketching and photographing them in order to share design
ideas with fellow enthusiasts in the United States. They focused on
glazed polychrome tiles and green foliage as the the primary
characteristic of a Spanish garden, in contrast with a "cool white
house." They also turned their attention to patios as the
embodiment of "indoor garden and outdoor salon." This book is their
legacy, and offers a multitude of ideas in the forms of
architecture, hardscaping, and landscaping. It is also a wonderful
tour of historic gardens, including the Alhambra, and gardens of
notables including the Duke of Medinaceli, the Duke of Alva,
Seville, and the Marques de Viana, Cordova. Regions covered include
Granada, Ronda, Las Ermitas, Sierra de Cordova, and Majorca.
Featuring over 40 cool, high-maintenance-looking plants, The
Unkillables will ensure your put your plant-murdering days firmly
in the past, and will transform your home into the gorgeous green
space you always dreamed of. Are you a plant killer? There's
nothing more heart-breaking than bringing your new plant baby home,
only to have it die a slow death in front of your very eyes. Was it
too much water? Not enough sunlight? A drafty corner? The reasons
for planticide can seem endless! In The Unkillables, Jo Lambell
shares her houseplant knowledge so that even the biggest plant
serial killers can have an abundant indoor garden. Jo will take the
fear out of the unknown and equip those with no green fingers at
all with the skills they need to keep their plants alive and
thriving. Plants can be a little intimidating - with their fancy
Latin names, complex terminology and 'just look at me and I'll
perish' reputation - so choosing hardy, tolerant plants is the best
place to start. Jo walks you through the basics of care - light,
water, location - as well as sharing information on repotting,
propagating, cleaning, First Aid and more.
Gardening organically outdoors is prevalent in most horticultural
circles these days, but what about gardening indoors? Many
gardeners still use harsh synthetic chemical fertilizers and
pesticides when growing plants in their homes. How can we choose to
eat organic foods, buy natural personal-care products, clean our
indoor air, and yet still blast our poor houseplants with toxic
chemicals? It is time to put down that spray bottle. Going organic
with houseplants is not only possible-the results are amazing
Author Julie Bawden Davis brings us Indoor Gardening the Organic
Way, a definitive guide to growing houseplants organically. From
the dirt on mulch to eco-friendly ways to handle plant pests, Davis
has provided this essential resource for novice and experienced
gardeners alike. When you learn the specialized rules of gardening
organically indoors, you'll soon reap the benefits of robust
houseplants that will impress visitors and make your indoor
environment a healthier place to be.
A Produce Reference Guide to Fruits and Vegetables from Around the
World: Nature?s Harvest answers the many questions consumers have
about various fruits and vegetables. Providing basic, clear, and
understandable information for each produce item, this reference
guide gives you a synopsis of the fruit or vegetable, a short
history of the item, the common and uncommon name, what it looks
and tastes like, how it is used, and the time of year it is
available. Information on nutrition, serving sizes, yields, and
optimal storage conditions is also provided. From potatoes to
shepherd?s purse and from grapes to the Clementine tangor, A
Produce Reference Guide to Fruits and Vegetables from Around the
World covers both the familiar and the exotic. Other than the
obvious fruits and vegetables (such as 12 varieties of cherries and
10 different kinds of squash) you?ll also read about herbs,
mushrooms, sprouts, and nuts. A Produce Reference Guide to Fruits
and Vegetables from Around the World is packed with useful
information. From practical advice to interesting trivia, some of
the things you?ll learn include: You should not eat any green parts
of potatoes--it will make you sick. How to classify a
peach--clingstone vs. freestone and white vs. yellow. The Texas
1015 Supersweet onion is named after its recommended planting date,
October 15. Kiwis (originally from China, not Australia) contain an
enzyme that tenderizes meat. Women in China once made a dye from
the skin of eggplants to stain their teeth black. The famous mutiny
by Captain Bligh?s crew was caused by breadfruit. Gourds may have
spread between continents by floating in the ocean, as they can
float in sea water for 220 days without losing seed viability. The
two nuts mentioned in the Bible--almonds and pistachios.As new
methods in farming, storing, and shipping are allowing exotic
fruits and vegetables unheard of a few years ago to becom
Open Miniscapes: Create your own terrarium and discover the
creativity and fun of making your very own indoor garden encased in
glass. Do you love the greener things in life but don't have the
time or space for endless gardening? This is the book for you.
Miniscapes has 16 projects covering four biomes (Desert, Forest,
Carnivorous and Air plants), suitable for all skill levels. The
book equips you with the knowledge you need about soil and rocks,
moss, tools, propagation, choosing your plants and containers, and
designing your tiny landscape. Between these covers is everything
you need to create and maintain healthy, happy terrariums that are
cheap to make and easy to maintain (you can even upcycle things you
already have at home).
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