Organic Gardening (Not Just) in the Northeast: A Hands-On Month-to-Month Guide

Author:   Henry Homeyer ,  Josh Yunger
Publisher:   Bunker Hill Publishing Inc
Edition:   New edition
ISBN:  

9781593730901


Pages:   264
Publication Date:   16 April 2011
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

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Organic Gardening (Not Just) in the Northeast: A Hands-On Month-to-Month Guide


Overview

Full Product Details

Author:   Henry Homeyer ,  Josh Yunger
Publisher:   Bunker Hill Publishing Inc
Imprint:   Bunker Hill Publishing Inc
Edition:   New edition
Dimensions:   Width: 15.40cm , Height: 1.80cm , Length: 22.70cm
Weight:   0.358kg
ISBN:  

9781593730901


ISBN 10:   159373090
Pages:   264
Publication Date:   16 April 2011
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

Reviews

With local strawberries about to come on the market many gardeners might be wishing they had planted their own, but when and what kind? Look no further than this well-written and informative but often amusing book that makes gardening a year-round adventure whether your green-thumb is best suited for vegetables, flowers, shrubs, or trees. For strawberries, Homeyer advises the day-neutral or ever bearing variety that can be harvested all summer long as well as a fall crop, too. All strawberries hate weeds, so mulch like crazy, he advises. The author started gardening as a toddler more than 60 years ago, but only started writing about the gardening magic 10 years ago. Some 500 articles were written since then; and as he says, his favorites and those of his readers were weeded out for this book. As for weeds in your garden, he recommends pulling a few every day. Make it a habit like brushing your teeth. As a journalist, Homeyer has the knack for finding people with good gardening stories to tell. An example was finding Joey Klein of Plainfield, VT at the Tunbridge World s Fair where he won a blue ribbon for his 18-inch long organically raised carrots. Joey attributed his success with carrots to weed control, proper watering, and raising them in soil built up with organic matter from cover crops (oats, peas, barley) that are mowed and ploughed into the soil. For growing giant pumpkins, the author checks out a 225-pound prize winner grown by Karen and Steve Cutter of Cornish, NH, who share their secrets on how to produce such a wonder, grown from Dills Atlantic Giant seeds. A remarkable story is also told about Bill Shepard of Thetford, VT, who decided that over the course of his life he would create an arboretum, which would not only please him but would nurture wildlife. Bill today has 30 species of trees growing on half an acre of land surrounding his house. The arboretum cost very little as family and friends gave him seedlings that were generally 12 24 inches tall.


We knew little of what is referred to as Lawn & Garden in the worldwide marketplace before we started CobraHead. But we soon learned that if you can make garden writers familiar and happy with your products, there is a chance they might mention them when they write, and possibly the Lawn & Garden industry might notice, too. So we ve promoted CobraHead products earnestly to garden writers and it s been a very smart move. Henry Homeyer was an early CobraHead convert and he s been a long time champion for our tools. Henry is a professional garden writer, Master Gardener, gardening magazine editor, radio broadcaster, and gardening teacher who lives and gardens in New Hampshire. He writes a weekly gardening column for a long list of newspapers in New England, and he has an avid following. Henry recently published another book and it s one I can recommend, highly. We like it so much we now offer it on our website HERE. The book is a collection of gardening articles Henry has written. They ve been edited and updated, and formatted into a month-by-month discussion of what gardeners should and could be doing throughout the gardening year. The title, Organic Gardening NOT JUST in the Northeast, is important. In Wisconsin we have real winters as do about two-thirds of the geographical US. So what Henry writes about is good for most everywhere except the deep South and west of the Rockies, and it certainly applies to most of Canada, too. Just remember that seed starting and planting dates can vary widely, even within your own state or province. Henry approaches growing and caring for both ornamental plants and food plants with totally organic methods. It s one of the things that I find so useful about the book. I ve met a lot of professional and amateur gardeners who seem to think organic is for the veggies, but it s okay to use chemical pesticides and herbicides on the flowers, lawn, and trees. My thinking is it s all the same garden, why do I want to poison any of it. I m gla With local strawberries about to come on the market many gardeners might be wishing they had planted their own, but when and what kind? Look no further than this well-written and informative but often amusing book that makes gardening a year-round adventure whether your green-thumb is best suited for vegetables, flowers, shrubs, or trees. For strawberries, Homeyer advises the day-neutral or ever bearing variety that can be harvested all summer long as well as a fall crop, too. All strawberries hate weeds, so mulch like crazy, he advises. The author started gardening as a toddler more than 60 years ago, but only started writing about the gardening magic 10 years ago. Some 500 articles were written since then; and as he says, his favorites and those of his readers were weeded out for this book. As for weeds in your garden, he recommends pulling a few every day. Make it a habit like brushing your teeth. As a journalist, Homeyer has the knack for finding people with good gardening stories to tell. An example was finding Joey Klein of Plainfield, VT at the Tunbridge World s Fair where he won a blue ribbon for his 18-inch long organically raised carrots. Joey attributed his success with carrots to weed control, proper watering, and raising them in soil built up with organic matter from cover crops (oats, peas, barley) that are mowed and ploughed into the soil. For growing giant pumpkins, the author checks out a 225-pound prize winner grown by Karen and Steve Cutter of Cornish, NH, who share their secrets on how to produce such a wonder, grown from Dills Atlantic Giant seeds. A remarkable story is also told about Bill Shepard of Thetford, VT, who decided that over the course of his life he would create an arboretum, which would not only please him but would nurture wildlife. Bill today has 30 species of trees growing on half an acre of land surrounding his house. The arboretum cost very little as family and friends gave him seedlings that were generally 12 24 inches tall. Homeyer has written an honest, enthusiastic, hands-on-organic gardener's delight of a book. The essays are like potato chips-- you can't read just one at a sitting. This is a classic by which future books on the subject will be measured. Homeyer has written an honest, enthusiastic, hands-on-organic gardener's delight of a book. The essays are like potato chips-- you can't read just one at a sitting. This is a classic by which future books on the subject will be measured.


With local strawberries about to come on the market many gardeners might be wishing they had planted their own, but when and what kind? Look no further than this well-written and informative but often amusing book that makes gardening a year-round adventure whether your green-thumb is best suited for vegetables, flowers, shrubs, or trees. For strawberries, Homeyer advises the day-neutral or ever bearing variety that can be harvested all summer long as well as a fall crop, too. All strawberries hate weeds, so mulch like crazy, he advises. The author started gardening as a toddler more than 60 years ago, but only started writing about the gardening magic 10 years ago. Some 500 articles were written since then; and as he says, his favorites and those of his readers were weeded out for this book. As for weeds in your garden, he recommends pulling a few every day. Make it a habit like brushing your teeth. As a journalist, Homeyer has the knack for finding people with good gardening stories to tell. An example was finding Joey Klein of Plainfield, VT at the Tunbridge World s Fair where he won a blue ribbon for his 18-inch long organically raised carrots. Joey attributed his success with carrots to weed control, proper watering, and raising them in soil built up with organic matter from cover crops (oats, peas, barley) that are mowed and ploughed into the soil. For growing giant pumpkins, the author checks out a 225-pound prize winner grown by Karen and Steve Cutter of Cornish, NH, who share their secrets on how to produce such a wonder, grown from Dills Atlantic Giant seeds. A remarkable story is also told about Bill Shepard of Thetford, VT, who decided that over the course of his life he would create an arboretum, which would not only please him but would nurture wildlife. Bill today has 30 species of trees growing on half an acre of land surrounding his house. The arboretum cost very little as family and friends gave him seedlings that were generally 12 24 inches tall. We knew little of what is referred to as Lawn & Garden in the worldwide marketplace before we started CobraHead. But we soon learned that if you can make garden writers familiar and happy with your products, there is a chance they might mention them when they write, and possibly the Lawn & Garden industry might notice, too. So we ve promoted CobraHead products earnestly to garden writers and it s been a very smart move. Henry Homeyer was an early CobraHead convert and he s been a long time champion for our tools. Henry is a professional garden writer, Master Gardener, gardening magazine editor, radio broadcaster, and gardening teacher who lives and gardens in New Hampshire. He writes a weekly gardening column for a long list of newspapers in New England, and he has an avid following. Henry recently published another book and it s one I can recommend, highly. We like it so much we now offer it on our website HERE. The book is a collection of gardening articles Henry has written. They ve been edited and updated, and formatted into a month-by-month discussion of what gardeners should and could be doing throughout the gardening year. The title, Organic Gardening NOT JUST in the Northeast, is important. In Wisconsin we have real winters as do about two-thirds of the geographical US. So what Henry writes about is good for most everywhere except the deep South and west of the Rockies, and it certainly applies to most of Canada, too. Just remember that seed starting and planting dates can vary widely, even within your own state or province. Henry approaches growing and caring for both ornamental plants and food plants with totally organic methods. It s one of the things that I find so useful about the book. I ve met a lot of professional and amateur gardeners who seem to think organic is for the veggies, but it s okay to use chemical pesticides and herbicides on the flowers, lawn, and trees. My thinking is it s all the same garden, why do I want to poison any of it. I m gla Homeyer has written an honest, enthusiastic, hands-on-organic gardener's delight of a book. The essays are like potato chips-- you can't read just one at a sitting. This is a classic by which future books on the subject will be measured. Homeyer has written an honest, enthusiastic, hands-on-organic gardener's delight of a book. The essays are like potato chips-- you can't read just one at a sitting. This is a classic by which future books on the subject will be measured.


Author Information

Henry Homeyer, aka The Gardening Guy, is a freelance writer, a UNH Master Gardener, a garden designer/consultant, and the author of three other books on gardening. He writes a weekly gardening column for the Valley News and other newspapers in the Northeast, in addition to broadcasting on VPR and teaching a course in 'sustainable gardening' at Granite State College. He lives in Cornish Flat, New Hampshire.JOSH YUNGER is the illustrator of several books including Wobar and the Quest for the Magic Calumet by Henry Homeyer also coming out this October. He is a faculty member at the AVA Gallery and Art Center (Alliance for the Visual Art) in Lebanon NH. In his spare time he writes and records songs for his band The Ologists. He lives in South Stafford, VT with his wife Erin and their young children George and Casey.

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