Books for the Home Gardener

Dec 1, 2020 | Default

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by The Royal Horticulture Society, 2018

gorgeous illustrations! It’s a practical hands-on guide that helps gardeners understand how plants grow, what affects their performance, and how to get better results. It’s an easy-to-understand explanations of over 3,000 botanical words + terms
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by John Seymour, 2008

This book explains how to cultivate and preserve all types of fruit, herbs, and vegetables, in addition to instructions on keeping bees, making cider, and raising chickens. It has over 600 illustrations and information on drying, storing, and preserving fruits and vegetables.
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by Jeff Lowenfels and Wayne Lewis, 2006

This book offers an alternative to the vicious circle of using harmful chemicals and details how to garden in a way that strengthens, rather than destroys the soil food web. Learn that healthy soil is teeming with life – not just earthworms and insects, but a staggering multitude of bacteria, fungi, and other microorganisms.
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by Barbara Pleasant and Deborah L. Martin, 2008

by Fern Bradley, Deborah L. Martin, and Barbara Ellis, 2009

by Brett L. Markham, 2010

A holistic approach to small-area farming with detailed photographs, tables, diagrams, and illustrations.
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Bonus Recomendations:

by Kate from a Likely Tale, 2020

A work of art and love. A fully illustrated book with over 100 plants and information on each, this book is one part magickal encyclopedia, and one part notebook and grimoire. Nature and plants are packed with magickal energies.
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by Nathaniel Hughes and Fiona Owen, 2009

A beautifully crafted and produced book that weaves together both author’s work to open new doorways into plant-time for the reader. The approach outlined in this book is the distillation of many years of teaching experience leading people into more intuitive relationships with plants.
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