Some people think that high summer is a time to sit back and interpret the splash marks that the fallen plums have made on the sidewalk – that somehow a restful, contemplative period is due them after the initial flurry of spring planting has finally passed. After all, the surviving squash are in mid flower, the leeks are passed the fiddly stage, and the tomatoes are just gearing up for the blight season. What could possibly be left for a gardener to do?
Fortunately, for the true fanatic, you can make yourself just as sweaty, dirty and exhausted in mid summer as you can in spring! Sound too good to be true?
Then let’s take a look at some possibilities:
Naturally, good gardeners do not expect to get this much action out of the garden without remembering to water, feed and mulch. Lay manure, seaweed, alder leaves or compost around your plants, water them well, and cover the soil with cardboard, straw, old carpets, or anything that will encourage moist roots and blissful worms. And if you have time left over, you could learn to interpret those splash marks on the sidewalk.
Finally! The long awaited realist view on gardening! The dark side smartly exorcized with wit and affection, this book is both a hoot and excellent reference guide. … Her respect for the reader raises her book heads above the others.
Worrying about where one is going to get their next meal is never something one wants to have to deal with. "Food Security for the Faint of Heart: Keeping Your Larder Full in Lean Times" is a book about preparation when crisis hits. In this modern world, everyone takes the existence of the supermarket for granted and has enough food for about a week, two at most. Covering the skills one needs to stay fed when disaster hits such as preservation, foraging, rationing, and more, "Food Security for the Faint of Heart" is something to keep at hand in case the worst occurs. From Amazon Reviews
With warm humour and patience, Wheeler introduces the basics of gardening in a manner that is both informative and a pleasure to read.
Edible Landscapes
Robin Wheeler
1732 Pell Road
Roberts Creek, BC
V0N 2W1
604.885.4505
info@ediblelandscapes.ca
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