Wednesday, February 29, 2012

The Good Food Revolution: Growing Healthy Food, People, and Communities (Hardcover)

The Good Food Revolution: Growing Healthy Food, People, and Communities
The Good Food Revolution: Growing Healthy Food, People, and Communities (Hardcover)
By Will Allen

Review & Description

A pioneering urban farmer and MacArthur “Genius Award” winner points the way to building a new food system that can feed—and heal—broken communities.

The son of a sharecropper, Will Allen had no intention of ever becoming a farmer himself. But after years in professional basketball and as an executive for Kentucky Fried Chicken and Procter & Gamble, Allen cashed in his retirement fund for a two-acre plot a half mile away from Milwaukee’s largest public housing project. The area was a food desert with only convenience stores and fast-food restaurants to serve the needs of local residents.

In the face of financial challenges and daunting odds, Allen built the country’s preeminent urban farm—a food and educational center that now produces enough vegetables and fish year-round to feed thousands of people. Employing young people from the neighboring housing project and community, Growing Power has sought to prove that local food systems can help troubled youths, dismantle racism, create jobs, bring urban and rural communities closer together, and improve public health. Today, Allen’s organization helps develop community food systems across the country.

An eco-classic in the making, The Good Food Revolution is the story of Will’s personal journey, the lives he has touched, and a grassroots movement that is changing the way our nation eats.
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Tuesday, February 28, 2012

How to Start a Home Based Business Selling Seeds (Kindle Edition)

How to Start a Home Based Business Selling Seeds
How to Start a Home Based Business Selling Seeds (Kindle Edition)
By Bruce Bullock

Review & Description

There are several reasons why selling seed is an ideal small business for those looking for a home based business that can bring in extra income.

•Selling seed is profitable. There are good margins to be made when selling seeds.
•More people than ever before prefer to ‘grow their own’ vegetables, flowers, plants and trees. There is a trend towards more inexpensive methods to grow plants which is also educational and satisfying.
•There is a certain allure to sowing seeds which people enjoy, especially those who have done this before. Nothing is as satisfying as seeing your first crop of seedlings emerge in spring.
•Many parents like to show their children the secrets of seed sowing. Sowing seeds is educational to both children and adults alike.
•Most seeds are small and do not take up much space. Keeping a stock inventory of seeds for sale can be easily done with very limited space.
•Seed is easily posted by small envelope or packet. This does not require a separate trip to the post office.
•Seed is not expensive. Most seeds can be bought in on a limited budget.
•Many seeds can also be collected for free in autumn and kept for resale.
•Seed selling is fun, can be started quickly and easily with a quick cash flow and daily income.
•Selling seeds need not take up much of your valuable time. Seed sales can also open the door to related sales of other products e.g. bulbs or plug plants.


Many people today are searching for an extra income that can help with the monthly bills. Selling seed is the ideal small home-based business that can be started up quickly and easily on a limited budget. With more people embracing ‘green’ sustainable eco-friendly lifestyles, selling seed is a popular choice.

This book will explain how to set up a small home-based mail order business where you can sell seeds in your own time with minimum fuss.

Over 8000 words or approx 32 kindle pages with an active table of contents and many links to reputable seed supplers.

There are several reasons why selling seed is an ideal small business for those looking for a home based business that can bring in extra income.

•Selling seed is profitable. There are good margins to be made when selling seeds.
•More people than ever before prefer to ‘grow their own’ vegetables, flowers, plants and trees. There is a trend towards more inexpensive methods to grow plants which is also educational and satisfying.
•There is a certain allure to sowing seeds which people enjoy, especially those who have done this before. Nothing is as satisfying as seeing your first crop of seedlings emerge in spring.
•Many parents like to show their children the secrets of seed sowing. Sowing seeds is educational to both children and adults alike.
•Most seeds are small and do not take up much space. Keeping a stock inventory of seeds for sale can be easily done with very limited space.
•Seed is easily posted by small envelope or packet. This does not require a separate trip to the post office.
•Seed is not expensive. Most seeds can be bought in on a limited budget.
•Many seeds can also be collected for free in autumn and kept for resale.
•Seed selling is fun, can be started quickly and easily with a quick cash flow and daily income.
•Selling seeds need not take up much of your valuable time. Seed sales can also open the door to related sales of other products e.g. bulbs or plug plants.


Many people today are searching for an extra income that can help with the monthly bills. Selling seed is the ideal small home-based business that can be started up quickly and easily on a limited budget. With more people embracing ‘green’ sustainable eco-friendly lifestyles, selling seed is a popular choice.

This book will explain how to set up a small home-based mail order business where you can sell seeds in your own time with minimum fuss.

Over 8000 words or approx 32 kindle pages with an active table of contents and many links to reputable seed supplers.

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The Practical Book of Greenhouse Gardening (Paperback)

The Practical Book of Greenhouse Gardening
The Practical Book of Greenhouse Gardening (Paperback)
By Ronald Herbert Menage

Review & Description

Grow greenhouse plants all year round without high heating costs, with this unique collection of plants recommended for cold, frost-free, or cool environments. Dozens of beautiful plants featured with complete information on siting, interior fittings, and heating, as well as plant care tips. Read more


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Herb Garden Design (Paperback)

Herb Garden Design
Herb Garden Design (Paperback)
By Faith H. Swanson

Review & Description

A unique and handsome book for novice and professional gardeners. The plans, with full commentary and plant lists, offer a wide range of designs easily adapted to one's own needs. Read more


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Monday, February 27, 2012

GARDENING (The Novice's Guide to Flower Gardening) (Kindle Edition)

GARDENING (The Novice's Guide to Flower Gardening)
GARDENING (The Novice's Guide to Flower Gardening) (Kindle Edition)
By Ken Dunn

Review & Description

GARDENING: The Novice’s Guide to Flower Gardening

#4: In the series of 10 Reports!

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Flower Gardening

[1] The Novice’s Guide to Flower Gardening
[2] Design Tips for Flower Gardens
[3] Flower Gardens: Part of Landscaping!
[4] Popular Flowers: Flower Gardens
[5] Protecting Your Flowers from Diseases

SAMPLE:

Flower Gardening

Growing flowers is a relatively simple task, especially if you choose hardy varieties. It can be as easy as tossing some wildflower seeds out, or it can be as complex as carefully planning the location of every single plant, every color, and the heights of all of the plants in relation to one another. It’s a very flexible form of gardening.

Flower gardening is good for people who are looking to add something aesthetically pleasing to their yards. It’s especially nice for people who just want to add some beauty and style to their yard, and people who really enjoy the classic look of a flower garden.

Flower gardening might not be right for people who enjoy a more modern look. Some people think flower gardens look a bit old-fashioned, and just don’t like them. Also, if you have hay fever or allergies, you may need to avoid flower gardening.

Flowers carry a lot of pollen, and people who have allergies might find it a bit difficult to care for their plants if their allergies are acting up. Some forms of flower gardening can be very difficult.

Rose gardening might be a bit too complex for many people, because roses can be rather finicky. Some types of flowers are especially particular, and may be quite difficult to grow.

Pros:

Great for providing aesthetics to a yard.
Very flexible, allowing for easier or harder gardening.
Less responsibility than growing food plants.

Cons:

Some varieties of flowers are very finicky and hard to grow.
Might not be good for people who prefer a more modern look.

Published by Dunway Enterprises

Author Ken Dunn
Copy Right 2012

http://www.dunway.comGARDENING: The Novice’s Guide to Flower Gardening

#4: In the series of 10 Reports!

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Flower Gardening

[1] The Novice’s Guide to Flower Gardening
[2] Design Tips for Flower Gardens
[3] Flower Gardens: Part of Landscaping!
[4] Popular Flowers: Flower Gardens
[5] Protecting Your Flowers from Diseases

SAMPLE:

Flower Gardening

Growing flowers is a relatively simple task, especially if you choose hardy varieties. It can be as easy as tossing some wildflower seeds out, or it can be as complex as carefully planning the location of every single plant, every color, and the heights of all of the plants in relation to one another. It’s a very flexible form of gardening.

Flower gardening is good for people who are looking to add something aesthetically pleasing to their yards. It’s especially nice for people who just want to add some beauty and style to their yard, and people who really enjoy the classic look of a flower garden.

Flower gardening might not be right for people who enjoy a more modern look. Some people think flower gardens look a bit old-fashioned, and just don’t like them. Also, if you have hay fever or allergies, you may need to avoid flower gardening.

Flowers carry a lot of pollen, and people who have allergies might find it a bit difficult to care for their plants if their allergies are acting up. Some forms of flower gardening can be very difficult.

Rose gardening might be a bit too complex for many people, because roses can be rather finicky. Some types of flowers are especially particular, and may be quite difficult to grow.

Pros:

Great for providing aesthetics to a yard.
Very flexible, allowing for easier or harder gardening.
Less responsibility than growing food plants.

Cons:

Some varieties of flowers are very finicky and hard to grow.
Might not be good for people who prefer a more modern look.

Published by Dunway Enterprises

Author Ken Dunn
Copy Right 2012

http://www.dunway.com Read more


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Sunday, February 26, 2012

Alpines: An Illustrated Dictionary (Hardcover)

Alpines: An Illustrated Dictionary
Alpines: An Illustrated Dictionary (Hardcover)
By Clive Innes

Review & Description

This book features photographs of almost 1000 rock garden plants, each accompanied by notes on habitat, distribution, growing habit, and flowering season. It includes many plants not thought of as alpines that are nonetheless at home in the rock garden.Published at $39.95 Our last copies available at $19.97 Read more


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Stuck on Cactus: A Beginning Grower's Guide (Paperback)

Stuck on Cactus: A Beginning Grower's Guide
Stuck on Cactus: A Beginning Grower's Guide (Paperback)
By David Wright

23 used and new from $0.39
Customer Rating: 4.0

First tagged by Council Crest Books
Customer tags: cacti(2), house plants(2), succulents(2), cactus(2), beginner cactus grower, gardening, indoor gardening, david e wright

Review & Description

A guide to a sticky situation! Don't be afraid to own a cactus! STUCK ON CACTUS takes the mystery out of owning and raising these often-overlooked plants. Written especially for beginners, the book takes a light-hearted approach toward the care of succulent plants. Not only is STUCK ON CACTUS fun to read and easy to understand, but it is filled with useful information, like how to keep from killing your cactus in the first two months (very important), how to fight nasty cactus-eating monsters (like red spider mites and thrips), and how to put together you own cactus grower's tool kit (filled with high-tech equipment like bent forks and chopsticks). Read more


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The Permaculture Handbook: Garden Farming for Town and Country (Paperback)

The Permaculture Handbook: Garden Farming for Town and Country
The Permaculture Handbook: Garden Farming for Town and Country (Paperback)
By Peter Bane

Review & Description

The urban landscape has swallowed vast swaths of prime farmland across North America. Imagine how much more self-reliant our communities would be if thirty million acres of lawns were made productive again. Permaculture is a practical way to apply ecological design principles to food, housing, and energy systems, making growing fruits, vegetables, and livestock easier and more sustainable.

The Permaculture Handbook is a step-by-step, beautifully illustrated guide to creating resilient and prosperous households and neighborhoods, complemented by extensive case studies of three successful farmsteads and market gardens. This comprehensive manual casts garden farming as both an economic opportunity and a strategy for living well with less money. It shows how, by mimicking the intelligence of nature and applying appropriate technologies such as solar and environmental design, permaculture can:

  • Create an abundance of fresh, nourishing local produce
  • Reduce dependence on expensive, polluting fossil fuels
  • Drought-proof our cities and countryside
  • Convert waste into wealth

Permaculture is about working with the earth and with each other to repair the damage of industrial overreach and to enrich the living world that sustains us. The Permaculture Handbook is the definitive practical North American guide to this revolutionary practice, and is a must-read for anyone concerned about creating food security, resilience, and a legacy of abundance rather than depletion.

Peter Bane is a permaculture teacher and site designer who has published and edited Permaculture Activist magazine for over twenty years. He helped create Earthaven Ecovillage in North Carolina, and is now pioneering suburban farming in Bloomington, Indiana.

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Saturday, February 25, 2012

GARDENING (Raised Bed Gardening!) (Kindle Edition)

Review & Description

GARDENING - Raised Bed Gardening!

#7: In the series of 10 Reports!

TABLE OF CONTENTS

[1] An Introduction to Raised Bed Gardening
[2] Why Raised Beds Make Gardening Easier
[3] Creating a Raised Bed Garden
[4] Choosing Plants for a Raised Bed Garden
[5] Maintaining a Raised Bed Garden

Raised Bed Gardening

Raised bed gardening is the method of growing plants in beds that are raised up off the ground. Typically, large rectangular boxes are fashioned out of large lumber, such as 4x4s. The boxes usually don’t have bottoms, so plant roots can grow down into the underlying soil.

Raised bed gardening is great for people who have little space, because plants are compacted into a much smaller area than they would be in a traditional garden. In traditional gardens, the path between rows takes up about as much space as the rows of plants! But raised bed gardening can help change that.

Even if you do have a lot of space, you might prefer growing in raised beds so you can grow more in the same amount of space. Raised beds can often double or triple the amount of produce harvested from an area of land!

Flowers aren’t generally grown in raised beds, because they don’t look very natural. Herbs and vegetables are more commonly grown in raised beds. Raised bed growing was created not only to save space and produce more from the same space, but also to help people who have very poor soil.

If you live in an area with very bad soil, you can simply buy a very high quality potting mix and place that in your raised beds, and you instantly have much better soil than you did before! It also has the added benefit of reducing weeds, making for less work overall.

Pros:

Great for people with poor soil.
Boosts production from the same amount of space.
Can make certain plants easier to grow than normal.

Cons:

Can still be challenging for people who aren’t physically capable.
A bit expensive to set up at the beginning.

By now you should already have a good idea of what type of gardening you think might be right for you. You have probably eliminated some possibilities, and you may have seen a couple of clear winners emerge.

If you’re still not settled on a particular type of gardening, you might start with one of the more simple forms of gardening like herb gardening or container gardening. This will be an easy way for you to tell whether or not you even enjoy gardening, whether you’re physically and mentally able to handle it, and how much time you have to devote to it.

By starting out small, you’ll have time to adjust to everything, and you’ll be able to decide just how much more you think you’re willing and able to handle.

Published by Dunway Enterprises

Author Ken Dunn
Copy Right 2012

http://www.dunway.comGARDENING - Raised Bed Gardening!

#7: In the series of 10 Reports!

TABLE OF CONTENTS

[1] An Introduction to Raised Bed Gardening
[2] Why Raised Beds Make Gardening Easier
[3] Creating a Raised Bed Garden
[4] Choosing Plants for a Raised Bed Garden
[5] Maintaining a Raised Bed Garden

Raised Bed Gardening

Raised bed gardening is the method of growing plants in beds that are raised up off the ground. Typically, large rectangular boxes are fashioned out of large lumber, such as 4x4s. The boxes usually don’t have bottoms, so plant roots can grow down into the underlying soil.

Raised bed gardening is great for people who have little space, because plants are compacted into a much smaller area than they would be in a traditional garden. In traditional gardens, the path between rows takes up about as much space as the rows of plants! But raised bed gardening can help change that.

Even if you do have a lot of space, you might prefer growing in raised beds so you can grow more in the same amount of space. Raised beds can often double or triple the amount of produce harvested from an area of land!

Flowers aren’t generally grown in raised beds, because they don’t look very natural. Herbs and vegetables are more commonly grown in raised beds. Raised bed growing was created not only to save space and produce more from the same space, but also to help people who have very poor soil.

If you live in an area with very bad soil, you can simply buy a very high quality potting mix and place that in your raised beds, and you instantly have much better soil than you did before! It also has the added benefit of reducing weeds, making for less work overall.

Pros:

Great for people with poor soil.
Boosts production from the same amount of space.
Can make certain plants easier to grow than normal.

Cons:

Can still be challenging for people who aren’t physically capable.
A bit expensive to set up at the beginning.

By now you should already have a good idea of what type of gardening you think might be right for you. You have probably eliminated some possibilities, and you may have seen a couple of clear winners emerge.

If you’re still not settled on a particular type of gardening, you might start with one of the more simple forms of gardening like herb gardening or container gardening. This will be an easy way for you to tell whether or not you even enjoy gardening, whether you’re physically and mentally able to handle it, and how much time you have to devote to it.

By starting out small, you’ll have time to adjust to everything, and you’ll be able to decide just how much more you think you’re willing and able to handle.

Published by Dunway Enterprises

Author Ken Dunn
Copy Right 2012

http://www.dunway.com Read more


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The Mulch Book: A Guide for the Family Food Gardener (Paperback)

The Mulch Book: A Guide for the Family Food Gardener
The Mulch Book: A Guide for the Family Food Gardener (Paperback)
By Stu Campbell

Review & Description

Covers the reasons for mulching, just what mulching is, how and what materials to use, and mulching perennials and annuals. Read more


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GARDENING (Rose Gardening) (Kindle Edition)

Review & Description

GARDENING - Rose Gardening

#9: In the series of 10 Reports!

TABLE OF CONTENTS

[1] An Introduction to Rose Gardening
[2] The Perfect Soil for Roses
[3] Choosing Roses for Your Garden
[4] How to Tend Your Roses
[5] Winterizing Your Roses

SAMPLE: An Introduction to Rose Gardening

Rose gardening is a great way to add a little classic elegance to your yard and garden. Roses are actually relatively easy to grow, and don’t require a lot of ongoing maintenance. Roses are the most well known and beloved flower in the world.

They’re not only beautiful, but they have many practical uses, too. They have been used for ages to treat all sorts of ailments. They’re also used to making perfumes, and for flavoring baked goods and confectionaries.

The tannin contained in rose petals can be used to control bleeding. An infusion of rose petals can be used to treat diarrhea. Rose oil and rose water are an ancient Chinese remedy for colon and stomach issues. Roses have been an important part of medical history.

Roses belong to the same family as plums, apples, and almonds. They are of the family Rosaceae, and the genus Rosa. There are thousands of varieties of domestic and wild roses, and they come in a rainbow of colors.

Although hybridizing has created all of these thousands of beautiful varieties, it has unfortunately caused many rose varieties to become weak. When certain features are enhanced, others can decline.

Today’s roses are often less resistant to attack by diseases and other pathogens. This means you’ll have to keep an eye on these weaker species, so you can take action if a problem arises.

The oldest known roses lived about forty million years ago.

Published by Dunway Enterprises

Author Ken Dunn
Copy Right 2012

http://www.dunway.comGARDENING - Rose Gardening

#9: In the series of 10 Reports!

TABLE OF CONTENTS

[1] An Introduction to Rose Gardening
[2] The Perfect Soil for Roses
[3] Choosing Roses for Your Garden
[4] How to Tend Your Roses
[5] Winterizing Your Roses

SAMPLE: An Introduction to Rose Gardening

Rose gardening is a great way to add a little classic elegance to your yard and garden. Roses are actually relatively easy to grow, and don’t require a lot of ongoing maintenance. Roses are the most well known and beloved flower in the world.

They’re not only beautiful, but they have many practical uses, too. They have been used for ages to treat all sorts of ailments. They’re also used to making perfumes, and for flavoring baked goods and confectionaries.

The tannin contained in rose petals can be used to control bleeding. An infusion of rose petals can be used to treat diarrhea. Rose oil and rose water are an ancient Chinese remedy for colon and stomach issues. Roses have been an important part of medical history.

Roses belong to the same family as plums, apples, and almonds. They are of the family Rosaceae, and the genus Rosa. There are thousands of varieties of domestic and wild roses, and they come in a rainbow of colors.

Although hybridizing has created all of these thousands of beautiful varieties, it has unfortunately caused many rose varieties to become weak. When certain features are enhanced, others can decline.

Today’s roses are often less resistant to attack by diseases and other pathogens. This means you’ll have to keep an eye on these weaker species, so you can take action if a problem arises.

The oldest known roses lived about forty million years ago.

Published by Dunway Enterprises

Author Ken Dunn
Copy Right 2012

http://www.dunway.com Read more


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Friday, February 24, 2012

Lasagna Gardening: A New Layering System for Bountiful Gardens: No Digging, No Tilling, No Weeding, No Kidding! (Paperback)

Lasagna Gardening: A New Layering System for Bountiful Gardens: No Digging, No Tilling, No Weeding, No Kidding!
Lasagna Gardening: A New Layering System for Bountiful Gardens: No Digging, No Tilling, No Weeding, No Kidding! (Paperback)
By Patricia Lanza

36 used and new from $10.98
Customer Rating: 5.0

First tagged by Debra Stout Tewalt
Customer tags: patricia lanza, gardening, organic

Review & Description

A gardening system that works-- so you don't have to!

Turn in your tiller for a stack of old newspapers! Replace your shovel with a layer of grass clippings! Let Pat Lanza show you how you can create lush, successful, easy-care gardens in practically any location without hours of backbreaking digging or noisy tilling.

* Practical, first-person advice from an experienced gardener
* Great ideas to let you spend more time enjoying your gardens and less time working in them
* Specific "lasagna" techniques for the most popular vegetables, flowers, herbs, fruits, and more
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GARDENING (The Benefits of Growing Your Own Herbs!) (Kindle Edition)

GARDENING (The Benefits of Growing Your Own Herbs!)
GARDENING (The Benefits of Growing Your Own Herbs!) (Kindle Edition)
By Ken Dunn

Review & Description

GARDENING - The Benefits of Growing Your Own Herbs!

#5: In the series of 10 Reports!

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Introduction:

[1] Benefits of Growing Your Own Herbs
[2] Planning Your Herb Garden
[3] Easy Herbs for Beginning Herb Gardeners
[4] Growing Herbs Organically
[5] Herb Gardening for Kids

INTRODUCTION

Herb Gardening

Herb gardening is a relaxing type of gardening. If you’re looking for a very simple type of gardening that doesn’t require a lot of maintenance, herb gardening is probably a great choice.

Most herbs are very hardy, and they don’t require a lot of ongoing maintenance.

If you choose mainly perennial herbs, you will have herbs that come back year after year with very little additional work. As long as you keep them watered and weeded, they should keep growing relatively well without a lot of additional work.

Herb gardening is great for children and elderly individuals, as well as busy people who don’t have a lot of time to care for picky plants. It may not be right for someone who prefers a challenge, or for people who prefer a more in-depth type of gardening.

Pros:

Doesn’t require a lot of time.
Relatively simple to do.
Doesn’t require a lot of physical exertion.
Plants are generally hardy and easy to care for.

Cons:

Can be a bit boring for people who like a challenge.

Might not be good for people who prefer more
complex forms of gardening.

Published by Dunway Enterprises

Author Ken Dunn
Copy Right 2012

http://www.dunway.comGARDENING - The Benefits of Growing Your Own Herbs!

#5: In the series of 10 Reports!

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Introduction:

[1] Benefits of Growing Your Own Herbs
[2] Planning Your Herb Garden
[3] Easy Herbs for Beginning Herb Gardeners
[4] Growing Herbs Organically
[5] Herb Gardening for Kids

INTRODUCTION

Herb Gardening

Herb gardening is a relaxing type of gardening. If you’re looking for a very simple type of gardening that doesn’t require a lot of maintenance, herb gardening is probably a great choice.

Most herbs are very hardy, and they don’t require a lot of ongoing maintenance.

If you choose mainly perennial herbs, you will have herbs that come back year after year with very little additional work. As long as you keep them watered and weeded, they should keep growing relatively well without a lot of additional work.

Herb gardening is great for children and elderly individuals, as well as busy people who don’t have a lot of time to care for picky plants. It may not be right for someone who prefers a challenge, or for people who prefer a more in-depth type of gardening.

Pros:

Doesn’t require a lot of time.
Relatively simple to do.
Doesn’t require a lot of physical exertion.
Plants are generally hardy and easy to care for.

Cons:

Can be a bit boring for people who like a challenge.

Might not be good for people who prefer more
complex forms of gardening.

Published by Dunway Enterprises

Author Ken Dunn
Copy Right 2012

http://www.dunway.com Read more


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Rodale's Pest & Disease Problem Solver: A Chemical-Free Guide to Keeping Your Garden Healthy (Hardcover)

Rodale's Pest & Disease Problem Solver: A Chemical-Free Guide to Keeping Your Garden Healthy
Rodale's Pest & Disease Problem Solver: A Chemical-Free Guide to Keeping Your Garden Healthy (Hardcover)
By Miranda Smith

Review & Description

Rodale's classic, organic solution guide to every garden pest problem is now available in paperback. This user-friendly handbook offers the most effective organic controls and includes a complete A-to-Z encyclopedia of more than 180 plants. 250 color photos and illustrations. Read more


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Thursday, February 23, 2012

Rodale's Complete Garden Problem Solver: Instant Answers to the Most Common Gardening Questions (Hardcover)

Rodale's Complete Garden Problem Solver: Instant Answers to the Most Common Gardening Questions
Rodale's Complete Garden Problem Solver: Instant Answers to the Most Common Gardening Questions (Hardcover)
By Cheryl Long

Review & Description

Whether gardeners are growing vegetables, herbs, fruits and nuts, or flowers, this book will help them identify plants quickly and easily and avoid future problems by creating an enduring, naturally healthy balance in the garden. 250 illustrations. Read more


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GARDENING (Rock Gardening) (Kindle Edition)

Review & Description

GARDENING - Rock Gardening

#8: In the series of 10 Reports!

TABLE OF CONTENTS

[1] An Introduction to Rock Gardening
[2] Designing a Rock Garden
[3] Rock Gardens for Landscaping
[4] Common Rock Garden Plants
[5] Rock Garden Ponds and Waterfalls

SAMPLE: An Introduction to Rock Gardening

There are many types of gardens you can have for your yard to make it more attractive in the neighborhood. Everyone knows that a nice, manicured lawn will go a long way to improve the overall look and appeal in any neighborhood.

Some of you may even have messy neighbors who don’t care about their lawn and having a fabulous garden could even offset the shabbiest of lawns. There are many types of gardens you could use for enhancing your lawn, but probably the simplest is the rock garden.

Rock gardens are a type of garden with an emphasis on rocks and stones with a few small plants that are found in naturally rocky areas. The plants are generally small and de-emphasized but are vital to help in the aesthetics.

Because the plants are native to rocky areas, they’ll be small and like their soil to be drier than most plants but can’t completely be without water. A popular type of rock garden is where bedrock is arranged to imply there was a bedding plane that had shifted or had come up partially above the ground.

Plants are arranged in this type of garden to hide joins between stones, whereas in its natural setting it would likely be one continuous piece. This type of professionally designed rock garden, or rockery, was popular in the Victorian times.

A Japanese rock garden, sometimes misnamed ‘Zen garden,’ is a sand box with sand, rocks, and very occasionally grass. The sand in these gardens tends to represent water, with the ridging caused by rakes to symbolize the ripples.

The rocks would then be islands. Some people believed these gardens were supposed to soothe the mind, but this was not the original intention. Understanding how to put together an effective garden for your terrain type would enhance your landscape.

Just because you don’t have fertile soil or lots of space without rocks, it doesn’t mean you can add to your landscape by having a garden. Even if your land is flat, you can bring in rocks for your rock garden. Just about every terrain type can support a rock garden.

Published by Dunway Enterprises

Author Ken Dunn
Copy Right 2012

http://www.dunway.comGARDENING - Rock Gardening

#8: In the series of 10 Reports!

TABLE OF CONTENTS

[1] An Introduction to Rock Gardening
[2] Designing a Rock Garden
[3] Rock Gardens for Landscaping
[4] Common Rock Garden Plants
[5] Rock Garden Ponds and Waterfalls

SAMPLE: An Introduction to Rock Gardening

There are many types of gardens you can have for your yard to make it more attractive in the neighborhood. Everyone knows that a nice, manicured lawn will go a long way to improve the overall look and appeal in any neighborhood.

Some of you may even have messy neighbors who don’t care about their lawn and having a fabulous garden could even offset the shabbiest of lawns. There are many types of gardens you could use for enhancing your lawn, but probably the simplest is the rock garden.

Rock gardens are a type of garden with an emphasis on rocks and stones with a few small plants that are found in naturally rocky areas. The plants are generally small and de-emphasized but are vital to help in the aesthetics.

Because the plants are native to rocky areas, they’ll be small and like their soil to be drier than most plants but can’t completely be without water. A popular type of rock garden is where bedrock is arranged to imply there was a bedding plane that had shifted or had come up partially above the ground.

Plants are arranged in this type of garden to hide joins between stones, whereas in its natural setting it would likely be one continuous piece. This type of professionally designed rock garden, or rockery, was popular in the Victorian times.

A Japanese rock garden, sometimes misnamed ‘Zen garden,’ is a sand box with sand, rocks, and very occasionally grass. The sand in these gardens tends to represent water, with the ridging caused by rakes to symbolize the ripples.

The rocks would then be islands. Some people believed these gardens were supposed to soothe the mind, but this was not the original intention. Understanding how to put together an effective garden for your terrain type would enhance your landscape.

Just because you don’t have fertile soil or lots of space without rocks, it doesn’t mean you can add to your landscape by having a garden. Even if your land is flat, you can bring in rocks for your rock garden. Just about every terrain type can support a rock garden.

Published by Dunway Enterprises

Author Ken Dunn
Copy Right 2012

http://www.dunway.com Read more


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Easy Compost: The Secret to Great Soil and Spectacular Plants (Brooklyn Botanic Garden 21st-Century Gardening Series) (Brooklyn Botanic Garden All-Region Guide) (Paperback)

Easy Compost: The Secret to Great Soil and Spectacular Plants (Brooklyn Botanic Garden 21st-Century Gardening Series) (Brooklyn Botanic Garden All-Region Guide)
Easy Compost: The Secret to Great Soil and Spectacular Plants (Brooklyn Botanic Garden 21st-Century Gardening Series) (Brooklyn Botanic Garden All-Region Guide) (Paperback)
By Brooklyn Botanic Garden

46 used and new from $0.01
Customer Rating: 4.0

First tagged by brainiacbooks
Customer tags: brooklyn botanic garden guides, gardening, compost

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Wednesday, February 22, 2012

Pom Pom Plants a Pomegranate (Paperback)

Pom Pom Plants a Pomegranate
Pom Pom Plants a Pomegranate (Paperback)
By Tess L Hileman

Buy new: $14.99
Customer Rating: 4.0

First tagged by Brett Hileman
Customer tags: pomegranate, animal book, panda bear, panda, kids book, childrens books, pomegranates, pom pom, gardening

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GARDENING (Your Introduction to Butterfly Gardening) (Kindle Edition)

GARDENING (Your Introduction to Butterfly Gardening)
GARDENING (Your Introduction to Butterfly Gardening) (Kindle Edition)
By Ken Dunn

Review & Description

GARDENING: #1: In the series of 10 Reports!

Your Introduction to Butterfly Gardening

TABLE OF CONTENTS

[1] Your Introduction to Butterfly Gardening
[2] Creating Your Butterfly Garden
[3] Butterfly - Host Plants!
[4] Butterfly - Nectar Plants.
[5] Common North American Butterflies

SMALL SAMPLE:

Your Introduction to Butterfly Gardening

In order to attract butterflies to your garden, you have to make your yard more inviting to them. You’ll need to provide plants that the caterpillars can use, food for the adult butterflies, and a good place for the butterflies to breed.

Most varieties of butterflies will also need some sort of shelter from wind. Although they really like open areas with a lot of sun, you’ll probably need to provide some sort of windbreak to protect them from high winds that can disturb them.

Butterflies often congregate by the edges of mud puddles. You’ve probably seen this before. It isn’t known exactly why butterflies enjoy mud puddles so much, but it’s thought that it may be certain minerals that are present in the muddy water. If you want to attract a lot of butterflies, you might consider keeping some damp areas in your garden.

Female butterflies need plants that can be eaten by the caterpillars that hatch from their eggs. Black swallowtails prefer dill and parsley, for example. Monarch butterflies typically only lay their eggs on milkweed. Female butterflies spend a lot of time searching for these plants to lay their eggs on.

Adult butterflies eat nectars from various flowers. Flowers that contain a lot of nectar are especially attractive to butterflies. These flowers are usually brightly colored and sweetly scented. Some species of butterflies feed on the honeydew produced by aphids. Some even feed on plant spa, bird feces, or rotting fruit!

Your butterfly garden should contain at least one big patch of flowers that will attract butterflies. You may want to get flowers that bloom in sequence, because this will keep butterflies visiting your garden more often.

Published by: Dunway Enterprises

http://www.dunway.com

Author – Ken Dunn
Copy Right 2012GARDENING: #1: In the series of 10 Reports!

Your Introduction to Butterfly Gardening

TABLE OF CONTENTS

[1] Your Introduction to Butterfly Gardening
[2] Creating Your Butterfly Garden
[3] Butterfly - Host Plants!
[4] Butterfly - Nectar Plants.
[5] Common North American Butterflies

SMALL SAMPLE:

Your Introduction to Butterfly Gardening

In order to attract butterflies to your garden, you have to make your yard more inviting to them. You’ll need to provide plants that the caterpillars can use, food for the adult butterflies, and a good place for the butterflies to breed.

Most varieties of butterflies will also need some sort of shelter from wind. Although they really like open areas with a lot of sun, you’ll probably need to provide some sort of windbreak to protect them from high winds that can disturb them.

Butterflies often congregate by the edges of mud puddles. You’ve probably seen this before. It isn’t known exactly why butterflies enjoy mud puddles so much, but it’s thought that it may be certain minerals that are present in the muddy water. If you want to attract a lot of butterflies, you might consider keeping some damp areas in your garden.

Female butterflies need plants that can be eaten by the caterpillars that hatch from their eggs. Black swallowtails prefer dill and parsley, for example. Monarch butterflies typically only lay their eggs on milkweed. Female butterflies spend a lot of time searching for these plants to lay their eggs on.

Adult butterflies eat nectars from various flowers. Flowers that contain a lot of nectar are especially attractive to butterflies. These flowers are usually brightly colored and sweetly scented. Some species of butterflies feed on the honeydew produced by aphids. Some even feed on plant spa, bird feces, or rotting fruit!

Your butterfly garden should contain at least one big patch of flowers that will attract butterflies. You may want to get flowers that bloom in sequence, because this will keep butterflies visiting your garden more often.

Published by: Dunway Enterprises

http://www.dunway.com

Author – Ken Dunn
Copy Right 2012 Read more


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GARDENING (The Benefits of Organic Gardening!) (Kindle Edition)

Review & Description

GARDENING - The Benefits of Organic Gardening!

#6: In the series of 10 Reports!

TABLE OF CONTENTS

[1] Benefits of Organic Gardening
[2] Controlling Weeds in an Organic Garden
[3] Dealing with Pests in an Organic Garden
[4] Making Organic Compost
[5] Types of Organic Fertilizers and Compost

SAMPLE: Benefits of Organic Gardening

Droves of people are turning to organic produce as a way to feel safer about the foods they eat. People are worried about the foods they put into their bodies. With all of the reports of food poisoning from fruits and vegetables, many people are worried about what they’re eating.

We now know just how dangerous all of those chemicals that we spray plants on can be, too. Many chemicals have been banned because they were shown to cause cancer! But some of these dangerous chemicals have not yet been banned, and there may be plenty of hidden dangers that haven’t yet been discovered.

When you garden organically, you can feel safer about the food you eat. You’ll know that the food you’re feeding your family is safer and healthier than the questionable stuff you find in the grocery store. You and your family deserve to eat food that won’t give you all cancer!

Organic gardening is also extremely beneficial to the environment for several reasons. For one thing, every time you spray your plants with chemicals, those chemicals wash off of your plants and onto the ground. From there, those chemicals wash down into the ground, and eventually make it into the groundwater!

When the insects on your plants are poisoned, they can be eaten by birds or other animals. These animals can then become sick and die. If the toxicity was high enough, any animals that eat those animals might also perish. This can have a very strong environmental impact.

Published by Dunway Enterprises

Author Ken Dunn
Copy Right 2012

http://www.dunway.comGARDENING - The Benefits of Organic Gardening!

#6: In the series of 10 Reports!

TABLE OF CONTENTS

[1] Benefits of Organic Gardening
[2] Controlling Weeds in an Organic Garden
[3] Dealing with Pests in an Organic Garden
[4] Making Organic Compost
[5] Types of Organic Fertilizers and Compost

SAMPLE: Benefits of Organic Gardening

Droves of people are turning to organic produce as a way to feel safer about the foods they eat. People are worried about the foods they put into their bodies. With all of the reports of food poisoning from fruits and vegetables, many people are worried about what they’re eating.

We now know just how dangerous all of those chemicals that we spray plants on can be, too. Many chemicals have been banned because they were shown to cause cancer! But some of these dangerous chemicals have not yet been banned, and there may be plenty of hidden dangers that haven’t yet been discovered.

When you garden organically, you can feel safer about the food you eat. You’ll know that the food you’re feeding your family is safer and healthier than the questionable stuff you find in the grocery store. You and your family deserve to eat food that won’t give you all cancer!

Organic gardening is also extremely beneficial to the environment for several reasons. For one thing, every time you spray your plants with chemicals, those chemicals wash off of your plants and onto the ground. From there, those chemicals wash down into the ground, and eventually make it into the groundwater!

When the insects on your plants are poisoned, they can be eaten by birds or other animals. These animals can then become sick and die. If the toxicity was high enough, any animals that eat those animals might also perish. This can have a very strong environmental impact.

Published by Dunway Enterprises

Author Ken Dunn
Copy Right 2012

http://www.dunway.com Read more


Find out More for the best price at Amazon

Tuesday, February 21, 2012

GARDENING (Why - Container Gardening?) (Kindle Edition)

Review & Description

GARDENING: #2: In the series of 10 Reports!

Why - Container Gardening?

ABLE OF CONTENTS

Container Gardening

[1] Why Container Gardening is the 'Best Way to Grow Plants'
[2] Planning Your Container Garden
[3] Choosing 'Containers' for Your Container Garden
[4] Choosing 'Plants' for Your Container Garden
[5] Locating an 'Outdoor Container Garden'

SAMPLE:

Container Gardening

Container gardening is a very flexible, very adaptable form of gardening. It can easily be adapted to almost anyone’s style of gardening. You can grow very hardy herbs, delicious vegetables, or finicky flowers.

You can have your container garden indoors or outdoors. You can make it as easy or hard as you wish. And you can even choose how much time it takes to maintain it! Container gardening is also really good for elderly people, handicapped people, and children.

Since the containers can be placed on surfaces of almost any height, it’s great for people who have trouble bending or stooping to care for plants in a traditional garden, or for those who are confined to a wheelchair.

It’s also very good for children and beginning gardeners, because you can plant very small areas, and it won’t require a lot of maintenance. Another great benefit of container gardening is saving space. If you have a very small yard or live in an apartment with no yard space at all, you can use containers to grow plants on your patio or porch.

You can grow almost anything in containers. Dwarf fruit trees, vegetables, herbs, and flowers can all be grown in containers, so it’s wonderful for growing almost anything you would normally grow in a traditional method.

It’s good for most people, but it might not be suitable for people who have very large families with a lot of mouths to feed. The start-up cost of buying containers and soil can be prohibitive for some, but you can make containers out of many different things if necessary.

Pros:

Doesn’t require a lot of time.
Relatively simple to do.
Doesn’t typically require a lot of physical exertion.
Extremely flexible.
Can be done even by people in apartments.
Great for elderly and disabled.

Cons:

Can be expensive to buy the containers and soil to start.
Not as good for people with large families to feed.

Published by Dunway Enterprises

Author Ken Dunn
Copy Right 2012

http://www.dunway.comGARDENING: #2: In the series of 10 Reports!

Why - Container Gardening?

ABLE OF CONTENTS

Container Gardening

[1] Why Container Gardening is the 'Best Way to Grow Plants'
[2] Planning Your Container Garden
[3] Choosing 'Containers' for Your Container Garden
[4] Choosing 'Plants' for Your Container Garden
[5] Locating an 'Outdoor Container Garden'

SAMPLE:

Container Gardening

Container gardening is a very flexible, very adaptable form of gardening. It can easily be adapted to almost anyone’s style of gardening. You can grow very hardy herbs, delicious vegetables, or finicky flowers.

You can have your container garden indoors or outdoors. You can make it as easy or hard as you wish. And you can even choose how much time it takes to maintain it! Container gardening is also really good for elderly people, handicapped people, and children.

Since the containers can be placed on surfaces of almost any height, it’s great for people who have trouble bending or stooping to care for plants in a traditional garden, or for those who are confined to a wheelchair.

It’s also very good for children and beginning gardeners, because you can plant very small areas, and it won’t require a lot of maintenance. Another great benefit of container gardening is saving space. If you have a very small yard or live in an apartment with no yard space at all, you can use containers to grow plants on your patio or porch.

You can grow almost anything in containers. Dwarf fruit trees, vegetables, herbs, and flowers can all be grown in containers, so it’s wonderful for growing almost anything you would normally grow in a traditional method.

It’s good for most people, but it might not be suitable for people who have very large families with a lot of mouths to feed. The start-up cost of buying containers and soil can be prohibitive for some, but you can make containers out of many different things if necessary.

Pros:

Doesn’t require a lot of time.
Relatively simple to do.
Doesn’t typically require a lot of physical exertion.
Extremely flexible.
Can be done even by people in apartments.
Great for elderly and disabled.

Cons:

Can be expensive to buy the containers and soil to start.
Not as good for people with large families to feed.

Published by Dunway Enterprises

Author Ken Dunn
Copy Right 2012

http://www.dunway.com Read more


Find out More for the best price at Amazon

The Speaker for the Trees (Kindle Edition)

The Speaker for the Trees
The Speaker for the Trees (Kindle Edition)
By Sean DeLauder

Buy new: $3.99
194 used and new from $0.00
Customer Rating: 5.0

First tagged by Sean DeLauder "James Mudd"
Customer tags: science fiction(2), funny, kindle free book, gardening, humor, satire

Review & Description

Hedge is a typical human--fat and bald, not pretty but not ugly, with a round, doting wife, and a farm where he tends beehives. Except Hedge is not a typical human. In fact, Hedge is not human at all, but a plant sent by the Council of Plants and the Plant of Ultimate Knowing to observe humanity and determine whether or not humanity is a threat to the universe. A task he has blithely performed for twenty years. Until the night he receives a message to report back to the Council and realizes he has to leave everything behind.

Pursued by an agent of the notorious Visitors, whose appearances have heralded the end of civilizations, torn between his fellow plants and an awakening affection for his earthwife, Anna, and armed only with a toaster, Hedge must find a way to save humanity from Visitors, plants, and themselves.Hedge is a typical human--fat and bald, not pretty but not ugly, with a round, doting wife, and a farm where he tends beehives. Except Hedge is not a typical human. In fact, Hedge is not human at all, but a plant sent by the Council of Plants and the Plant of Ultimate Knowing to observe humanity and determine whether or not humanity is a threat to the universe. A task he has blithely performed for twenty years. Until the night he receives a message to report back to the Council and realizes he has to leave everything behind.

Pursued by an agent of the notorious Visitors, whose appearances have heralded the end of civilizations, torn between his fellow plants and an awakening affection for his earthwife, Anna, and armed only with a toaster, Hedge must find a way to save humanity from Visitors, plants, and themselves. Read more


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The Big Book of Gardening Secrets (Paperback)

The Big Book of Gardening Secrets
The Big Book of Gardening Secrets (Paperback)
By Charles W. G. Smith

Review & Description

Scores of professional secrets for growing better vegetables, herbs, fruits, and flowers! Extend your growing season and increase yields with this thorough guide to every aspect of backyard gardening! Learn how to: -- Grow more and better-tasting herbs and vegetables -- Grow annuals, perennials, bulbs, even roses, in any climate -- Landscape with shrubs, vines, and trees -- Make compost and amend soil -- Create indoor and outdoor container gardens -- Cultivate bountiful berry patches and fruit orchards You'll also find low-maintenance shortcuts and money saving solutions to dozens of common gardening problems. Read more


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