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Books > Gardening > General
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Chemistry in the Garden
(Hardcover)
James Hanson; Foreword by Chris Brickell; Contributions by William R Johncocks, Jennifer Harding
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R919
Discovery Miles 9 190
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Ships in 18 - 22 working days
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The aim of this book is to describe some aspects of the chemistry
and chemical ecology which are found in the garden. In the garden
there are numerous interactions between plants, the soil and with
other organisms in which chemistry plays a central mediating role.
The discussion concerns several of the chemically and ecologically
interesting compounds that are produced by common ornamental garden
plants and vegetables and by the predators that attack them. Many
chemists are amateur gardeners and this book is directed at them as
well as those with a general interest in the scientific processes
involved in the garden.
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.
A handbook of greenhouse culture, excluding the fully heated
greenhouse, but including frames and greenhouses with some heating
apparatus. A book of modern technique and illustrating plants which
can now be grown without heat or with moderate heat. A chapter is
included on cheap greenhouse construction, with costs. Contents
Include: Greenhouses Old and New Hard-Wooded Plants Climbing Plants
Miscellaneous Plants for the Cold House Greenhouse Plants from Shed
The Diseases of Plants under Glass Bulb Plants and Ferns On the
Cost of the Various Types of Greenhouse Mentioned in Chapter 1
Keywords: Greenhouse Plants Climbing Plants Greenhouse Culture
Greenhouse Construction Greenhouses Miscellaneous Moderate Heat
Glass Bulb Heating Apparatus Ferns Shed Diseases
Many of the earliest books, particularly those dating back to the
1900s and before, are now extremely scarce and increasingly
expensive. We are republishing many of these classic works in
affordable, high quality, modern editions, using the original text
and artwork.
A testament to the influential nature of educational and community
gardening programs for teens Part engaging conversation, part
comprehensive fieldwork, Growing a Life demonstrates just how
influential educational and community gardening programs can be for
young teens. Follow author Illene Pevec as she travels from rural
Colorado to inner city New York, agrarian New Mexico to Oakland,
California, in order to study youth gardening and the benefits it
contributes to at-risk teen lives. Extensive research, supplemented
by beautifully candid interviews with students, illustrate the life
altering physical and mental benefits that mentored gardening
programs can provide. Giving readers the opportunity to examine the
largely unexplored topic of urban gardening, the programs discussed
present models for future educational and community based gardens.
Each destination brings with it an abundance of programs geared
toward educating teens by giving them the tools they will need in
order to have fruitful futures. With an emphasis on positive
psychology, Growing a Life delves into the minds of underprivileged
teens and what gardening means to them.
Take a stroll through the garden of a self-confessed hortimaniac.
Gardening is Marie Harrison's avocation, passion...some might say,
obsession. In her personal, witty style (she refers to her husband
as Amiable Spouse, or A.S. for short), Marie divulges her own
tried-and-true ways of gardening along the coasts of the southeast
United States. Marie covers perennials, flowers grown from bulbs,
herbs, shrubs and small trees, vines, edible flowers, and herbs for
flower borders. A section of full-color photos captures these
beautiful plants and flowers in all their vibrant glory. Charming
pen-and-ink illustrations are sprinkled throughout the text. Marie
discusses the edible and medicinal properties of various plants
(there's even a quick or two ), as well as coastal considerations
such as salt tolerance; environmental issues such as pesticide use,
beneficial insects, and exotic invasives; and gardening for birds
and butterflies. She also offers her musings on the seasons in
Florida and how she spends her time in the garden during each phase
of the year. Whether you're seasoned gardener like Marie or a
tentative beginner just starting out with a windowsill herb garden,
this delightful book will make you appreciate the dirt under your
fingernails.
This delightful collection of wisdom, insight and humor, from Diane
Ackerman to Emile Zola, captures the essence of the world's most
popular hobby. Here are over four hundred quotations -- not only
one-line zingers but stanzas of verse and full paragraphs of
narrative -- on the endless fascination of gardening. The great
gardening writers of past and present are amply represented, but
these varied selections also range the entirety of recorded
literature, from the Bible and the tenth-century Japanese diarist
Sei Shonagon through Chaucer, Shakespeare, Dickens, Walt Whitman,
and even Prince Charles.
For anyone who counts their hours in the soil as their most
valued, "The Quotable Gardener" is the ideal gift -- an invaluable
inspiration during the gardening months, and a treasured companion
during the long, desperate winter.
What could be better than watching the natural world out your
window or on your television? Going out and experiencing it
firsthand. In these fifty essays, acclaimed nature and science
writer Sy Montgomery takes her readers on a season-by-season tour
of the wilderness that is often as close as the backyard. Sy
invites -- almost dares -- readers to follow her and form hands-on
relationships with the plants, animals, birds, and even the insects
that share space with people. These essays, most of which
originally appeared in Sy's Boston Globe column Nature Journal, are
by turns enlightening, entertaining, sometimes amusing, and always
absorbing and informative. Filled with natural history and lore,
the essays urge readers to appreciate what they find around them.
Part of a gardening series which offers expert advice and tips on
plant care in both the home and the garden, this book deals with
colour for the balcony. Illustrated throughout with colour
step-by-step photographs, this series covers everything from
fertilizing to maintaining a garden pond.
The remarkable story of Dr Shirley Sherwood, scientist, author, travel writer, gardener as well as mother and grandmother.
Following the tragic death of her brilliant scientist husband, Michael Cross, in a freak air crash in 1964, she was left as a 30-year-old widow with two young boys aged four and three. For the next twelve years she worked as a key member of the Nobel Prize-winning team which developed Tagamet, the first blockbuster drug (sales of over $1 billion a year). After her marriage to Jim Sherwood in 1977, she left science to concentrate full-time on the huge task of restoring the fabled Orient-Express train, probably the most luxurious and exotic form of travel ever devised. The Venice Simplon-Orient-Express, running between London and Venice, was relaunched in 1982, ninety-nine years after its first journey. Sherwood's history of the project sold more than 400,000 copies. The Orient-Express train was just the beginning.
The Sherwoods went on to create the five-star Orient-Express Hotels company (now Belmond), which owned some of the finest hotels in the world, including the Cipriani in Venice, the Mount Nelson in Cape Town and the Copacabana Palace in Rio. They pioneered new train routes across the Alps, started the Eastern & Oriental Express running between Singapore and Bangkok- crossing over the Bridge on the River Kwai- opened up tourism in Myanmar with the first cruise ship to operate on the Irrawaddy, and took over the railways of Peru, which run all the way to Machu Picchu and Lake Titicaca.
Her most lasting achievement, the one of which she is proudest, is the Shirley Sherwood Collection of contemporary botanical art, which she started in 1990 and now includes over 1,000 paintings and drawings representing the work of more than 300 contemporary botanical artists from 36 countries. She has mounted exhibitions in many prestigious locations including the Smithsonian Institute in Washington, the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford, Kirstenbosch in Cape Town and the Real Jardin Botanico, Madrid. The Shirley Sherwood Gallery in Kew Gardens is the first museum to be dedicated to modern botanical art and her books, which often accompanied her exhibitions, have been largely responsible for re-establishing botanical art in its rightful place as an important art form.
These are just some of the many achievements in a long and rich life, vividly described in this book.
Renowned horticulturist Don Hastings and his son Chris present
step-by-step instructions for year-round care of lawns, gardens,
flowers, and houseplants from Virginia to Texas.
The New Hampshire Gardener's Companion is the only guide focused on
the challenges of cultivating a successful garden in the Granite
State. Whether you are an experienced green thumb or an inquiring
novice, whether you live in the White Mountains, the Connecticut or
Merrimac River valleys, or along the seacoast, this
easy-to-understand guide will help you grow bountiful vegetables,
abundant flowers, and lush lawns.
Among the great joys of gardening, as this book demonstrates, are
changing one's mind, striking out in new directions, and trying
something new. In short, Lloyd encourages all gardeners to be
adventurous and offers ways to make new and exciting such familiar
chores as weeding, taking cuttings, reseeding, and pruning roots
and branches. Both the neophyte and the experienced gardener will
benefit from Lloyd's advice and inspiration.
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