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Carrots Love Tomatoes: Secrets of Companion Planting for Successful Gardening
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Carrots Love Tomatoes: Secrets of Companion Planting for Successful Gardening |
Release
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April, 1998 |
Author |
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Louise Riotte
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Storey Books |
Catalog |
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Our
Price |
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£ 9.99 |
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Availability
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usually dispatched within 2 to 3 weeks. |
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Good in parts
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This book contains a lot of useful information, not just about companion planting but also about other things such as pest control. However, the book is aimed at the american market; also the illustrations are amateur, inaccurate and I find them offputting.There are also gross inaccuracies in the text, for example the author states that dandelions are not in competition with the grass in your lawn because they take nutrients from a different level of the soil. The illustration clearly contradicts the assertion and anyway the author has omitted to mention that the dandelion kills off grass by excluding light. That the book is aimed at americans is mostly okay for me as what is grown in Britain is usually grown somewhere in America. However, the american bias means that, under 'pest control' you are told how to cope with raccoons and the odd praying mantis but not about how to stop foxes leaving heaps of dung and digging up your plot.
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An indespensible tool for the beginner to the expert.
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This is a lovely book, filled with diagrams and charts. The nature of companion benefit or detriment is clearly and thoroughly examined in the first half of the book, while the second half demonstrates how to best plan for a garden even if you have no more than a small window. The children's garden and postage stamp garden plans deserve special mention.
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Easy to understand for beginner gardeners!
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I love this book. Ms. Riotte has answered many questions I have had. Nicely written for those just beginning there journey into gardening. She even devotes a section solely to poisonous plants which is very interesting! Ms. Riotte breaks the chapters down as follows: Vegetables; Herbs; Wild Plants; Grasses, Grains, and Field Crops; First Steps for Home Fruit Growing; Nuts; Ornamental Trees and Shrubs; Garden Techniques; Soil Improvement; Pest Control;Poisonous Plants; Garden Plans; Sources; Suggested Reading. I like the fact that things are crossed referenced, so while it is a good read, you can also use it as a manual. The only thing I thought could be improved upon in the book was the drawings of the garden plans. They look as though someone drew them on a piece of paper and then photocopied them into the book. They are legible but hard to read. Luckily in writing they explain what they are drawing.
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