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Gardening When It Counts: Growing Food in Hard Times (Mother Earth News Wiser Living Series) by Steve Solomon
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Gardening When It Counts: Growing Food in Hard Times (Mother Earth News…

by Steve Solomon

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The best book for vegetable gardening since Coleman's New Organic Gardening. ( )
Wmt477 | Dec 4, 2008 |  
I haven't had a chance to try out what he suggests, but he makes some compelling arguments that my Square Foot Garden was counterproductive. ( )
jaygheiser | Nov 22, 2008 |  
I love this book. I have heard Steve Solomon called arrogant but I did not find him to be that way. He is however a glass is half empty kind of guy. I appreciate it. So many gardening books are so unrealistic leading people to believe they can grow anything if they only do a simply X.Y and Z. It rarely works out that way. This is the best gardening book I have read in a while and I have read a lot.

I appreciate him breaking down vegetables into how demanding they are to grow. I love his recipe for COF or complete organic fertilizer. I can't wait to put more of his suggestions into practice. I definitely took his advice as a former owner of a seed company into practice with my most recent seed company choices. I will be pulling this book out over and over again. I can't recommend it enough. I will also not be doing any more French intensive gardening. He just confirmed what I had experienced over the years. I hate to say I just needed someone to point out that just because "everyone" says this is what is best doesn't mean it's so! ( )
Saponaria | Jul 24, 2008 | 1 vote
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Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 086571553X, Paperback)

The decline of cheap oil is inspiring increasing numbers of North Americans to achieve some measure of backyard food self-sufficiency. In hard times, the family can be greatly helped by growing a highly productive food garden, requiring little cash outlay or watering.

Currently popular intensive vegetable gardening methods are largely inappropriate to this new circumstance. Crowded raised beds require high inputs of water, fertility and organic matter, and demand large amounts of human time and effort. But, except for labor, these inputs depend on the price of oil. Prior to the 1970s, North American home food growing used more land with less labor, with wider plant spacing, with less or no irrigation, and all done with sharp hand tools. But these sustainable systems have been largely forgotten. Gardening When It Counts helps readers rediscover traditional low-input gardening methods to produce healthy food.

Designed for readers with no experience and applicable to most areas in the English-speaking world except the tropics and hot deserts, this book shows that any family with access to 3-5,000 sq. ft. of garden land can halve their food costs using a growing system requiring just the odd bucketful of household waste water, perhaps two hundred dollars worth of hand tools, and about the same amount spent on supplies - working an average of two hours a day during the growing season.

Steve Solomon is a well-known west coast gardener and author of five previous books, including Growing Vegetables West of the Cascades which has appeared in five editions.

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:12 -0400)

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