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Books > Sport & Leisure > General
A beautiful, stylish and comprehensive handbook from the Bloom
Gardener's Guides series, covering everything you need to know to
grow edible plants. Growing your own food is a way to feed your
body as well as your soul. Approached in a sustainable way, it can
also nurture the land and provide for wildlife. You don’t need an
enormous garden, an allotment or a fancy greenhouse to do it.
Edible Garden is as much about planting food in your garden borders
and sowing crops in pots, as it is about raised beds or kitchen
gardens. It’s packed with professional advice, a selection of the
best edible plants to grow and tips on getting the most from your
space. This title is from the Bloom Gardener's
Guide series, complete and comprehensive gardening handbooks.
Bloom is an award-winning independent print
magazine for gardeners, plant admirers, nature lovers and
outdoor adventurers, and winner of the Garden Publication of the
Year at the Garden Media Awards 2021. Other titles in this series
include Cut Flowers, Shade and Pots.
Living in New England is normally considered an idyllic experience,
but it is not immune to the wrath of Mother Nature. With the
exception of volcanoes, earthquakes, and tsunamis, New England has
seen it all. Floods, hurricanes, blizzards, ice storms, tornadoes,
drought, and wildfires have all ravaged the region at one time or
another. Historic Disasters of New England tells the stories of the
biggest and baddest natural calamities to have struck the region,
including: - The 4-state tornado swarm of 1787 - The October Gale
1841 - The Great Blizzard of 1888 - The Heat Wave of 1911 - The
Twin Hurricanes of 1954
tobermory: tobar mhoire - well of Mary - site of an early Christian
settlement on the Isle of Mull, the vibrant and picturesque town in
whose bay a galleon of the Spanish Armada sank, said to be carrying
untold treasures which have yet to be recovered. teuchter:
disparaging or contemptuous term for a Highlander, esp a Gaelic
speaker or anyone from the north. Peter Macnab was reared on Mull,
as was his father, and his grandfather before him. In this book he
provides a revealing account of life on Mull during the first
quarter of the 20th century, focusing especially on the years of
World War 1. This enthralling social history of the island is set
against Peter Macnab's early years as son of the governor of Mull
Poorhouse, one of the last in the Hebrides, and is illustrated
throughout by photographs from his exceptional collection. Peter
Macnab's 'fisherman's yarns' and other personal reminiscences are
told delightfully by a born storyteller. This latest work from the
author of a number of books about the island, including the
standard study of Mull and Iona, reveals his unparalleled knowledge
of, and deep felling for, Mull and its people. Despite his long
career with the Clydesdale Bank, first in Tobermory and later on
the mainland, Peter, now 94, remains a teuchter at heart, proud of
his island heritage.
This helpful guide to building lasting relationships focuses on the
personalities of the partners and introduces ways to build enduring
compatibility. Love is Not Enough: What It Takes to Make it Work
explores why couples fall into the same types of relationship traps
time and again and offers sound advice, based on extensive research
and real case stories, for recognizing and combating the forces
that can sink a promising relationship. While it is true that
opposites can attract, irrevocably opposed personalities and habits
cannot sustain a relationship. How can you foresee one partner
being the immovable object to the other's irrepressible force? As
Love is Not Enough shows, it is all about personality—yours, your
potential partner's, and how the two mesh. Thoroughly grounded in
the realities of relationships today, the book helps readers
recognize and understand interactions among different personality
types. Each chapter offers carefully considered wisdom on how to
resolve particular differences in a relationship and break through
to the kind of awareness and understanding that invariably makes
things work.
American society is no longer defined by marriage. Today, an
increasing majority of American households are headed by single men
and women. Even those Americans who do marry spend at least half of
their adult lives alone. Living on one's own presents unique
challenges depending on one's age, health, and circumstances. So
the script for successful single living calls for different
strategies for young adults, the recently divorced, single parents,
and those widowed or experiencing single life in later adulthood.
Here, Dr. Yount considers each group's special needs and challenges
and offers a guide for leading a productive, rewarding, and
fulfilling single life. Single living, he contends, requires some
core abilities: overcoming loneliness, reaching out to others,
developing faith in oneself and self-respect, keeping up with daily
activities, and maintaining good health, security, and a sense of
humor. This book helps readers learn to celebrate their single
status and to find contentment and peace while living on their
own.
These days, if you are unmarried and pining for romance, you are
in a small minority. Until recently, most Americans considered
single life to be a temporary situation during which one would
simply wait for a soul mate to come along. Those who remained unwed
were pitied as bachelors and spinsters. No longer These days, most
single men and women find autonomy in negotiating their way through
life by relying on their own resources, with marriage remaining one
option, but not an imperative. Even those who do marry are getting
married later, and those who divorce or are widowed often choose to
stay single. With this trend toward singlehood increasing,
affirming the single life and making a success of it becomes all
the more important. Yount offers advice for creating a gratifying
and happy single life at any stage, and provides insight into those
things that can contribute to a satisfying single lifestyle. He
pinpoints areas that often get ignored by singles, and proposes
solutions to some of the pitfalls that can lead to loneliness or
unhappiness. Leading a fulfilling single life is not only possible,
it can in fact be rewarding in itself, and Yount shows readers how
to lead productive and creative lives as modern singles.
A slow cooker is the perfect solution for anyone who loves good
food but has little time to spend in the kitchen, and here you’ll
find every recipe you'll ever need. They can be used day or night,
and you don’t have to stay in to keep an eye on the pot while you
produce hearty family food. Warming Soups to try include Chicken
Noodle Soup; Slow-cooked Onion and Cider Soup; and Italian
Vegetable and Bread Soup. Starters and Light Bites include Blue
Cheese Fondue; Pork, Fennel and Spinach Terrine; and Beef and Ale
Pâté. Comforting one-pot Meat dishes include Provencal Daube of
Beef; Slow-Braised Lamb Shanks with Red Wine, Rosemary and Garlic;
Meatballs in Red Pepper Sauce; and Moroccan Lamb Tagine with
Preserved Lemons and Carrots. Deliciously easy recipes for Poultry
and Game include Coq au Vin; Lemon Chicken with Dumplings; Chicken
Jalfrezi; and Creole Duck. Try a Lighter recipe for Fish and
Seafood such as Mediterranean Chunky Fish Stew; Banana Leaf Fish;
and Kerala Coconut Chilli Prawns. Nourishing Vegetarian Dishes
include Root Vegetable Ragù; Smoky Hotpot of Great Northern Beans;
Lemon, Fennel and Mushroom Risotto; and Thai Red Pumpkin Curry.
Recipes for indulgent Desserts include Peaches Poached in Vanilla
Honey Syrup; Blueberry and Cherry Sponge; and Coffee Hazelnut
Pudding with Coffee Bean Sauce.
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