Showing posts with label gardening. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gardening. Show all posts

Seed to Seed: The Secret Life of Plants Review

Seed to Seed: The Secret Life of Plants
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You know about writer's block, the frightening state of an author who just cannot come up with another idea about which to write. Nicholas Harberd had researcher's block. He had done plenty of work as a laboratory scientist, working out the biochemical mechanisms of some very basic capabilities of growth in plants. Having gotten some answers, there turned out to be more and deeper questions (the familiar pattern that will keep science going forever), but he was not inspired into a next project. What to do? Part of the charm of his book, _Seed to Seed: The Secret Life of Plants_ (Bloomsbury) is that he lets us know how he as a working scientist came to solve that problem. He lets us in on some biological secrets, as he opens up some of the mechanisms that are at the core of what roots and shoots do. Best of all, he gives himself, and imparts to us, a higher appreciation for the natural world, invoking a mystic unity inspired by science, and an appreciation for all the paradoxes that this entails.
The specific subject of Harberd's research and his book is _Arabidopsis thaliana_, the thale-cress, a humble weed which has gained stardom as the first plant to have its DNA entirely sequenced. To dismantle the block that has left him uninspired to start up any new project, Harberd started a journal for 2004 to record the history of one thale-cress plant; this book is his journal. His selected plant isn't one of the thousands of plants in his lab, but one in the wild, for which he (and the reader) come to have interest and affection. In watching the plant, he describes for himself and for us the intricate dance between DNA, RNA, and the proteins for which they code. By experimentation, and there is a good deal described in these pages, the exquisitely fine-tuned molecular symphony takes place; even in the humble root of this humble plant there are regulators, and regulators to regulate the regulators, and so on in dizzying iterations.
It is fair to ask what use all this detailed knowledge is. Even his daughter, when being told about proteins that restrain the growth of plants, wants Harberd to use them on a neighbor's sycamore that increasingly is shading their garden. The real goal, Harberd says, is not utility (although it is certainly possible that plants are going to be improved the better we know the details of their molecular workings). And for him, the real goal is also not simply a better understanding of how the molecules do their jobs. "I'm more motivated by the sense that understanding brings me closer to Nature. That there's a link between understanding and reverence." It is a pleasure to read Harberd's musings on how nature may be perceived as a unity in different ways, how his plant is so connected with the air and soil around it that distinctions between those entities seem artificial, or how, if one considers the sun as the nucleus of a globe defined by the spread of its light, then the plants which respond to the light, their germinated seeds, and those of us who live on plants, are all parts of the sun. Harberd has done a wonderful job of telling what a scientist goes through, how decisions get made about what sort of work should be done next, and even about the difficulties of getting published. These are not reflections strictly confined to plant biology, and while _Seed to Seed_ has within it a great deal of explanation about molecular complexity, it is best in its vivid musings on how science can reflect nature and bring us closer to it.


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Gardening with Shape, Line and Texture: A Plant Design Sourcebook Review

Gardening with Shape, Line and Texture: A Plant Design Sourcebook
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This book is a typical high-quality Timber Press publication, with heavy weight glossy pages and incredibly beautiful photos. I will definitely use this book as a resource to go back to time and time again while I plan my gardens. However, since the author is British, the book is skewed mostly to English gardening (sorry Arizona residents)and there is no mention of conifers at all. How can someone leave out the pyramidal shapes of spruces or the exclamation points of Skyrocket junipers?? And how can one omit weeping Atlas cedars, ground-hugging Blue Chip junipers or conical Alberta spruces? This is a HUGE hole in a book about line and texture in garden design. The author organizes perennials, trees and some shrubs nicely into differing shapes, but since most American gardens contain some kind of conifers or evergreens for "year-round" interest, the book isn't as useful as it could have been.

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From the Ground Up: The Story of A First Garden Review

From the Ground Up: The Story of A First Garden
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Amy Stewart tells the story of how she got to Santa Cruz & took over a patch of seaside earth in which a couple of fruit trees, a handful of shrubs & a host of weeds fought for life.
Each chapter includes helpful tips on neighborly propagation, composting, worm juice, rose pruning techniques, how to make a bug love you & concocting a gardener's bath. They are not what you think - some of this novice's results are hilarious while others are downright commonsensical. One of the first tips she gives us is on Making a Sun Map - do give it a go - I haven't looked at my garden the same since I discovered this clue.
Alongside the story of this young woman's determination to create a garden in which the plants will live up to her vision, she remembers family moments from her childhood while facing down obstinate natives more wily than her. Talk about turf wars!
A fine companion for anyone contemplating becoming addicted to gardening! Amy Stewart has since moved to northern California where she is hard at work on her second garden &, I hope, her second book.

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Hardy Bamboos: Taming the Dragon Review

Hardy Bamboos: Taming the Dragon
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As a relatively ignorant gardener on the topic of bamboos, I was looking for a good book for gardeners (opposed to scientists) on the topic of bamboos to possibly incorporate into my temperate garden (Central PA, USDA Zone 6). Comparing this book to 'Bamboo for Gardens' (A highly recommended book based off of other customer reviews as well as several online bamboo nurseries), I found this book to be a much better read for the temperate gardener than the former.
In 'Hardy Bamboos', Paul Whittaker tells us many wonderful and personal stories about his experiences growing bamboo. I find highly personal accounts such as this a joy to read because they bring gardening to life. Furthermore, these firsthand experiences really help in the bamboo plant entries. Although 'Bamboo for Gardens' does provide sufficient information on the culture of each bamboo (i.e light requirements, max. height, min. temp. hardiness, etc) 'Hardy Bamboos' goes even further. In each entry, Whittaker also includes a pencil sketch to more specifically describe the overall habit of each bamboo (i.e. tall and stately vs. tall and arched, etc), measurements from his garden regarding actual bamboo height and spread at different ages as well as numerous observations that he's made reguarding specific varieties over the year. These details and measurements made this book more useful for me than 'Bamboo for Gardens' with regards to figuring out how a bamboo will grow and look in my garden. However, I should point out that 'Bamboo for Gardens' goes into much more scientific background on bamboos and includes both the temperate and tropical bamboos. Because of this, I find that 'Bamboos for Gardens' makes a better overall bamboo reference book.
But for those of us who live in temperate regions and wish to learn more about how to grow bamboos outside in our gardens, I found 'Hardy Bamboos' to be the better, more garden-detailed book.

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Courtyards: Aesthetic, Social, and Thermal Delight Review

Courtyards: Aesthetic, Social, and Thermal Delight
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Courtyards is a terrific book, the result of 20+ years of loving research. Oregon Professor John Reynolds is crazy for courtyards and it certainly shows.
A courtyard is a space surrounded by a building, often surrounded by a house. There are all manner of courtyards, large, small, huge, quiet, loud. Some are open and others are terribly private. But all good courtyards have things in common. In the landscapes most of us in the US are used to, we have a house and the gardens are on the outside and we see them before we see the house. In a sense these landscapes serve mostly as dressing to enhance the outward look of the house. But a fine courtyard garden is different. It is smack in the middle of the house and the house surrounds it. It is not wide open to the world, but instead is a place to get away from it all, a place to be outside, but not to be out in the open. The best courtyards are open to the sky, have water, vines, a multitude of interesting flowers, trees, potted plants. A large number of the very finest courtyard plants are discussed in detail in this excellent book. I was struck by how interesting the numerous photos and designs were. Profusely illustrated, each one serves a definitive purpose. I was struck too, by how many different things go into the making of a well thought out courtyard. What is involved so that it will be warm in the winter and cool in the hot summer. What is involved so that it becomes a place where people want to be. I took many notes as I read this large book and some day I plan to build a house of my own design, and in the middle of it, I'm going to have a courtyard. And in this courtyard, I'll have all the things needed, the ingredients so carefully detailed here, that make the right courtyard a magical place. I'd recommend this book for anyone who ever plans to build their own home, for all landscape designers, for all architects, for anyone with a serious interest in horticulture and design. An excellent book.

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COURTYARDSAesthetic, Social, and Thermal DelightCourtyards is an artful, informative exploration of courtyards, from their origins in early civilization to contemporary design concepts. Architects and landscape architects will repeatedly turn to the detailed guidelines for reference, gain a greater sense of balance between building and garden, and cultivate optimal green space by using the practical planting tips. Over one hundred photographs and drawings illustrate the concepts written about by an authority and passionate scholar in his field.

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Taylor's Master Guide to Landscaping Review

Taylor's Master Guide to Landscaping
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This book is an outstanding overview of landscape design. The book is divided into small, easily readable segments discussing every aspect of design including evaluating your site, hardscape, and plant selection and care. This is not a how-to book; readers interested in this would be happier with any book by Sara Jane von Trapp. Instead, Taylor's Master Guide to Landscaping paints the execution of garden design in broad strokes. There is an emphasis on working with your individual property, and the book provides you with the knowledge needed to determine what will work in your yard (and what will not). A lot of information is contained in well-organized, cohisive prose. The photographs are beautiful and appropriate to the subject matter being discussed. I found this book very difficult to put down, although it is organized in such a way that it would be easy to digest in small portions (as well as refer back to later). In conclusion, no gardening fan should be without this book.

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Burpee : The Complete Vegetable & Herb Gardener : A Guide to Growing Your Garden Organically Review

Burpee : The Complete Vegetable and Herb Gardener : A Guide to Growing Your Garden Organically
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This book could easily be worth $50 and it would be worth the investment. I've been a gardener for a number of years, and out of the entire bookshelf of gardening books that i own, this book, hands down, is far more comprehensive than all of them put together. The first section of the book, a complete book in intself, will teach you just about everything you ever wanted to know about almost every aspect of gardening, and is comprehensive enough that if you learned it all you would be well on your way to becoming a master gardener. The second section, the plant portraits, gives you more information about each vegatable and herb in your garden than you could ever dream of knowing about, and more information than you would even be able to find. Like tomatoes? there are almost eight pages dedicated to them alone. The entire book is filled with beautiful color photographs, and it is packed with tons of hard-core information. Not like the "fluff" and tons of meaningless words without any content that practically all the other books are filled with. Recently i have moved to all hydroponics, and most of the rest of my gardening books are now about worthless to me, however this book is still prooving to be an invaluable source of information. The only thing this book does not cover very well is insects and plant diseases, although it still does quite a bit better than most gardening books do. Of course, if it did, this book would probably be over 700 pages long, "complete vegatable and herb gardener" style. The book "The organic gardeners handbook of natural insect and disease control" is a very good book on this subject. Spend the money and get both of these books. You wont need anything else.

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Moss Gardening: Including Lichens, Liverworts, and Other Miniatures Review

Moss Gardening: Including Lichens, Liverworts, and Other Miniatures
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Impressively illustrated with glorious full color photographs of the many & various moods of moss gardening from a tilled sand Zen meditation complete with mossy stones to wild, serene woodlands carpeted with lush colonies glowing in slanting sunshine, this is one Edenesque read. If you know of anyone with moss on their minds, this is a unique love story of one fellow who bent down to earth to study these little green plants. As magnificent as the subject itself. Very well done!

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Weeds: In Defense of Nature's Most Unloved Plants Review

Weeds: In Defense of Nature's Most Unloved Plants
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As witty and lively as it is comprehensive, British nature writer Mabey's history and celebration of weeds leads us through the botanical marvels, folklore, literary allusions, medicinal uses and human interaction with his country's (and the world's) most invasive and hated plants.
Many, of course, if not most, were introduced by humans, cultivated in gardens like the infamous kudzu vine or sowed for commercial purposes like the melaleuca tree from Australia which was introduced to the Everglades to "dry out the marshes sufficiently to grow crops and condominiums," and sucks up five times more water than native species.
One botanist managed to grow 300 species from the detritus gathered from his trouser cuffs. The Romans introduced medicinal species to Britain, which persist long after the Romans have gone. Weeds arrive in goods shipped by truck, ship plane or on the fur of your dog, and prove their ingenuity and opportunism wherever a niche arises, be it a concrete walkway or a roadside ditch. Weed seeds have been known to bide their time for years, centuries, even millennia, if need be.
They have developed abilities to mimic crops and even adapt to rotation, mowing, grazing animals and, of course, herbicides. They take advantage of war to colonize bombsites and other ruins. The retiring plant rosebay willow herb thrived on London rubble during World War II and "was christened `bombweed' by Londoners, most of whom had never seen the plant before." "A bindweed root or stem chopped into a hundred pieces by a frustrated gardener is simply the starting point for a hundred new plants." Which produce 600 seeds a year, germinating in summer and autumn, or maybe lying dormant for 40 years.
Curiously, America was easily colonized by Britain's weeds, though the reverse was not the case, a fact which amused Darwin and has to do with much cultivated, versus little cultivated ground.
From Shakespeare's' cleverly allusive Midsummer Night's Dream to John Wyndham's nightmarish The Day of the Triffids, Mabey revels in wild plants' roles in literature, as well as letters, poetry and folklore.
A stimulating sojourn with the world's most fascinating and ingenious plants, this is a book which all but demands an Internet connection while reading. Line drawings begin each chapter, but Mabey mentions so many plants (many with different names here in the U.S.) with so much affection and appreciation that readers will demand to know what they look like.


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Oh Garden of Fresh Possibilities: Notes from a Gloucester Garden Review

Oh Garden of Fresh Possibilities: Notes from a Gloucester Garden
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"Oh Garden of Fresh Possibilities" is one of the most refreshing and original garden books I've seen published in the last twenty years. In contrast to the recent plethora of garden photo books (no doubt thanks to advances in digital photography), "Oh Garden" presents a journey through the intimate garden, profusely illustrated with the author's own beautifully rendered watercolors of flowers, birds, and butterflies. The images and text harmonize and complement each other to form an evocative and powerful message of organic unity.
But the elegant presentation is only the beginning: Kim Smith really knows her gardens, and this handy volume is crammed full of garden lore and practical down-to-earth information. Want to learn how to attract butterflies? Kim reveals which plants will do the job. But she goes one step further and discusses why butterflies are a gardener's friend, and considers the question of the garden's insect population from a holistic viewpoint. For Kim Smith, the garden is not just an assembly of plants blooming in a certain sequence; a garden tells a story, and provides a living habitat shared by both the homeowner and the vast variety of flora and fauna that make up a thriving garden.
"Oh Garden of Fresh Possibilities" is a trusty companion that will be a gardener's friend for years to come. It's also the perfect gift for anyone who has seen a sprightly Monarch butterfly float outside the window and wonders why the wandering butterfly chose that particular spot on that particular day--and how to encourage more colorful lepidoptera to visit. Kim reveals how to weave together color, texture, and aroma into an environment that makes the most of even a small garden, and provides encouragement and advice for beginners and seasoned veterans alike.

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Roots, Shoots, Buckets & Boots: Gardening Together with Children Review

Roots, Shoots, Buckets and Boots: Gardening Together with Children
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This book does more than just suggest seeds to plant or tools to buy--it's full of the coolest garden designs I've ever seen that are focused on kid fun. Lovejoy presents a large number of gardens based around a central theme- some edible with veggies and herbs, some aimed more at flowers. Each theme includes a list of plants for different zones and a garden-related project or two that brings new dimensions to history, nutrition, science, cooking, ecology or art for your kids. Several of them revolve around a "tent" frame that needs a couple of adults to build it; it's sort of like a teepee, but with more supports. Once the frame is built, you can add a variety of different vines to create anything from a "night garden" tent of scented white flowers to a thickly-screened shade tent for hot summer days. Since the frame can be covered with annuals, you can plan a different garden each year. There's ideas for traditional knot gardens, proper composting, flowers for craft activities, and unusual and easy-to-grow edibles, and it's easily possible to combine a couple of Lovejoy's themes to creat your own. Lots of basics on plant care are included--even if you've never really gardened before, you can handle these layouts if you don't mind getting dirty. You also don't have to have a huge yard to apply some of these ideas; some of the projects can even happen in balcony containers. It's a great gift for your own kids or any other family you know who likes to have fun outside, and by far the best kid gardening book I've ever seen.

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Hugh Johnson in the Garden: The Best Garden Diary of Our Time Review

Hugh Johnson in the Garden: The Best Garden Diary of Our Time
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If I owned a stately home, or some woods in Wales, or vineyards and forests in France, I should now know exactly what to do with them - engage some Garden Staff to run around the conservatory painting the plants' toenails.... Not having any of these things, Mr Johnson's musings don't strike any chords. (And after the third piece about how leaves are affected by spring frost, one wonders what the editor was thinking). If you are an ordinary mortal (a job, limited garden space, plants mysteriously and persistently die...) I'd recommend Henry Mitchell's work instead. Mitchell also has a sense of humor.

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Color by Design: Planting the Contemporary Garden Review

Color by Design: Planting the Contemporary Garden
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An innovative and creative approach to designing with colour. The use of Clive Nichol's stunning photos of Hadspen Garden combine perfectly with the witty and informative text of Nori and Sandra Pope, who are also the gardeners at Hadspen. The publishers are to be congratulated for producing a book that will change the direction of garden book design.

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Coleus: Rainbow Foliage for Containers and Gardens Review

Coleus: Rainbow Foliage for Containers and Gardens
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I've been a coleus fanatic for years, and really enjoyed this book. Lots of good information here that I hadnt known, even though I've grown a great many coleus.
I only wish the book could have been twice as long and included a more comprehensive listing and photos of coleus (in all fairness, there are thousands of them and many are very similar). It would also have been nice to have included more photos of coleus combined with other plants-coleus fills out a pot/planting of flowering annuals beautifully if done well. It's not a talent I have but I have many photos of wonderful combinations done by others.
On the whole, this is a terrific book. Any coleus lover will enjoy it and learn from it.

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Coleus are no longer your grandmother's parlor plants. Favourites during the Victorian era, these plants have made a dramatic comeback with a dazzling variety of leaf color, shape, and pattern. No other plant is so easy to grow and propagate. Their sumptuous colors and tough constitution make coleus ideal both as attention-getting focal points and as complements to other foliage or flowering plants. In this lavishly illustrated volume, expert plantsman Ray Rogers offers equal parts of design inspiration and practical advice. The heart of this book is an encyclopedia that describes and evaluates more than 225 varieties.

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Down to Earth With Helen Dillon Review

Down to Earth With Helen Dillon
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Helen Dillon has been gardening for over thirty years in her Dublin, Ireland garden. In this book, she shares her vast experience, her hits and misses and provides indispensable advice on what she has learned over the years. Long time gardeners know that gardening is a journey and in this book, Dillon shows how hers has evolved and changed over the past three decades. The book is divided into three sections and each one features two or three page essays on various topics. Section One - "Beginner's Stuff" - has chapters on how-to-do subjects like potting a container, weeding and dealing with pests. Design aspects include the importance of pathways and selecting plants (such as "Ten Trees for a Small Garden" and "Evergreen Plants for Walls"). Section Two - "The Middle Ground" - discusses gravel gardens, roses, pruning, Mediterranean gardens, screening neighbors, clematis, etc. Section Three - "Fancy Stuff" - has chapters on exotic plants, gardening in old age, dogs in the garden, hardy orchids, and much more. These examples are just a small sampling - overall, there are over seventy chapters. The book is generously illustrated with photos taken in Dillon's garden and most of them were taken by her so accomplished photographer should also be added to her resume. Although highly skilled, Dillon makes the reader feel at ease - she's not afraid to tell you that many plants have died in her garden ("victims" she call them) and laughs at herself for making bad decisions now and then. She is an author that gardeners can easily identify with and her book is one to joy.

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Gardening Step by Step Review

Gardening Step by Step
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This is a hefty, sizeable book that shows large, lush gardens and mature plants for the most part.
The majority of plants are called by their Latin names, rather than their common names which is good for proper identification, but which does not make for easy reading.
The book contains a great deal of good advice. I would not really suggest it for beginning gardeners, but for those who already know something about gardening and wish to improve their skills.
There are many missing varieties such as crepe myrtle and thyme from any mention.
The book contains; designing with plants, how and where to plant, container ideas, low maintenance gardens, pruning,, vegetable gardening, plant guides. Probably the best section is the last which gives small pictures of plants in Latin alphabetical order, a description of the plant, height, hardiness, soil preference, sun or shade, this also has a pruning and a vegetable section.


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This gardening manual offers practical tips, checklists, charts, and step-by-step instructions taken from the best of DK's popular Simple Steps to Success series. With beautiful illustrations and an easy-to-follow format, Gardening Step by Step shows you how to keep your garden gorgeous all year-round.

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Armitage's Vines and Climbers: A Gardener's Guide to the Best Vertical Plants Review

Armitage's Vines and Climbers: A Gardener's Guide to the Best Vertical Plants
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I heard Allan Armitage interviewed by Walter Reeves on the radio here in Atlanta. I was really excited about getting the book and planned to give it as a gift. I was disappointed. If you'd like to read about vines, you might enjoy this one. But if you are looking for a reference book or a guide book to choosing the best vines for a particular location, this book is a bummer. There is little consistency in the way the information is presented for each plant and no quick identifiers about which do best in sun, shade, or in particular soil. There are some lists at the end of the book, but not enough, and still none about the most basic, sun vs, shade, etc. Very surprising. Entries are laid-out in paragraph form which you must read through. It's very impractical, and surprising that an editor would overlook this. I love books and usually prefer them, but this time I say, save your money and do an internet search. I'm not even sure that I will give it as the gift I intended - if it wasn't going to cost me, I'd return it.

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