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Books > Health, Home & Family > Gardening > Specialized gardening methods > Organic gardening
Would you like to improve your garden?
Working with the ancient skill of dowsing can help you in all
aspects of you garden, making decisions about design, helping you
map growing conditions and choosing the best plants for each
spot.
It can help you choose the best suppliers and the healthiest
plants.
Dowsing can help you solve problems in the garden, it can help
you plant and harvest your vegetables at the right time and help
you plan a herb garden.
This book will teach you how to work with the ancient skill of
dowsing, introducing dowsing rods, the forked stick and the dowsing
pendulum.
It will show you how to include dowsing in every stage of your
gardening, from initial design and planning, through choosing your
suppliers and picking the best plants, to harvesting and storing
your vegetable crops.
In fact, dowsing and gardening were just made for each other
Local nurseryman, Paul Dowlearn, of Wichita Valley Landscape and
Nursery, has published his book, The Lazy Man's Garden: Maximum
return; Minimum input. The book focuses, as the title suggests, on
minimal effort in gardening and yard care with a quality output.
Dowlearn writes, "Americans are intensively growing millions of
acres of lawn grasses. We are also attempting to grow mostly
non-native exotic hybrids for ornamentals. Much of this traditional
culture is not sustainable. Vegetable gardening is one of the few
things that survived our landscaping ethic to give the homeowner
benefits that go beyond aesthetics. Utilizing native plants,
creating habitat for wildlife, and seeking out old tried and true
heirloom plants are current trends that promise a more relaxed,
eco-friendly style. Homeowners today are demanding low water, low
maintenance, and plants that don't need to be replaced on a
seasonal basis. The landscaping industry has been slow to respond.
Although there are a growing number of landscape professionals who
share the viewpoint of the author, they are, unfortunately still in
the minority. How far will the 20th Century horticulture and
agriculture regimes carry us into the 21st Century? Are we really
getting our money's worth out of our landscaping investment? Are
all these different fertilizers, chemicals, and hardware truly
necessary? Not so, says The Lazy Man. Follow the journey from where
we've been, where we are, to where we are going with a lifetime
gardener, landscaping veteran, and naturalist. Read on...."
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