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The Herb Garden: A Complete Guide to Growing…
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The Herb Garden: A Complete Guide to Growing Scented, Culinary and Medicinal Herbs (original 1984; edition 1984)

by Sarah Garland

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1813150,311 (3.63)1
A practical guide to herb gardens, the varieties of herbs available and how best to grow and cultivate them. The photographs seek to illustrate the attractiveness of herbs in any situation. Practical instruction on cultivating, propagating, harvesting and using the herbs is set in the wider context of designing a pleasing and functional garden: planning a knot garden, building raised beds and banks, and establishing plants underfoot and training them overhead. A herb index catalogues the enormous variety of herbs available, with illustrations comparing species from the more complicated herb families.… (more)
Member:ruric
Title:The Herb Garden: A Complete Guide to Growing Scented, Culinary and Medicinal Herbs
Authors:Sarah Garland
Info:Frances Lincoln Publishers Ltd (1984), Hardcover, 168 pages
Collections:Your library
Rating:***
Tags:non-fiction, gardening, gardening: garden design, herbs, herbs: cosmetic, herbs: culinary, herbs: medicinal

Work Information

The Herb Garden: a complete guide to growing scented, culinary and medicinal herbs. by Sarah GARLAND (Author) (1984)

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Herb gardening from past to present. The book starts by telling about herbal gardens in history, how they featured in monasteries and the private courtyards of wealthy ladies in medieval days, how their style and use changed through the times, ending up to the state of gardening in more modern times. The included illustrations taken from ancient manuscripts and paintings are lovely. Traditional and historical ways the herbs have been incorporated into cooking, used for scents, as dying materials or for health are all mentioned, with suggestions and many cautions- as a lot of ancient herbs are highly toxic or their original medicinal use is no longer recommended. Many are named just because they are pretty or have interesting properties- like curiously shaped seeds. There is also information on how to grow the herbs, whether from seed or cuttings, and care for them.

Really though much of the book is about building a garden- how to design and plan it, how to lay paths and construct benches, walls, arbors or a trellis, with many ideas for an attractive or practical arrangement. I garnered some new ideas on what an herbal bed in my own garden could look like (for example, I might do well to separate my perennial herbs that like richer, damp soil- the lemon balm, sorrel and perpetual onions- from those that like it dry and lean- the lavender, sage and winter savory- and mix grit or broken stone into the latter). There’s helpful lists grouping herbs by the soil type they prefer, or sun/shade exposure, by color or height. And more extensive lists by use- herbs for medicines, for dying fabrics, for a scented garden or kitchen use. Many many plants are named that I know little about- with enticing hints at their growing habits and textures. The photos are a tad disappointing- often slightly grainy, not clear enough focus to actually see the individual plants well, though they do give you a good impression how the herbs look together in various garden styles. The twenty-five page glossary lists a bounty of herbs, with useful details on them, but scant pictures.

more at the Dogear Diary ( )
  jeane | Mar 5, 2021 |
Useful little book divided into four main sections.

1. The herb garden in history: examines monastery, medieval, renaissance and physic gardens illustrated with reproductions of pictures, planting plans and photos.

2. Planning the herb garden presents a number of design solutions for incorporating herb gardens into modern gardens.

3. Constructing a herb garden covers useful construction techniques such as walls and boundaires, paths, fences and arbours etc.

4. Final section is about cultivating herbs - how to grow and use them. ( )
  ruric | Oct 26, 2011 |
I enjoyed this book very much especially the early chapters on the herb garden in history. Nice descriptions with drawings and/or pictures of monastery gardens, Medival and Renaisssance Gardens plus something they call the Physic Gardens of today. Not only does it offer the usual index of herbs, this very helpful little book also suggests different ways to plan your garden and constructing quaint accessories for it. Methods in cultivating herbs in included with advice on everything from choosing herbs to growing herbs in containers.
I highly recommend this book for the novice to intermediate herb garden hobbyist. 4 stars ( )
  Carmenere | May 18, 2009 |
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A practical guide to herb gardens, the varieties of herbs available and how best to grow and cultivate them. The photographs seek to illustrate the attractiveness of herbs in any situation. Practical instruction on cultivating, propagating, harvesting and using the herbs is set in the wider context of designing a pleasing and functional garden: planning a knot garden, building raised beds and banks, and establishing plants underfoot and training them overhead. A herb index catalogues the enormous variety of herbs available, with illustrations comparing species from the more complicated herb families.

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