Picture of author.

About the Author

Image credit: Carleen Madigan

Series

Works by Carleen Madigan

Tagged

agriculture (15) animals (9) beekeeping (4) bees (6) chickens (10) cooking (8) DIY (19) environment (4) farm (4) farming (28) food (22) food preservation (6) fruit (5) garden (21) gardening (145) home (9) homestead (25) homesteading (81) how-to (5) Kindle (5) livestock (7) non-fiction (62) permaculture (7) read (8) reference (14) self-sufficiency (26) survival (8) sustainability (12) to-read (51) vegetables (11)

Common Knowledge

Canonical name
Madigan, Carleen
Other names
Perkins, Carleen Madigan
Birthdate
1976
Gender
female
Occupations
gardening editor
managing editor
Nationality
USA
Places of residence
Nampa, Idaho, USA
Associated Place (for map)
Idaho, USA

Members

Reviews

9 reviews
This book has more than I could have hoped for. I had read its companion about animal raising and I ordered this because I have been a vegetable gardener for several years now.

OH. MY. GOSH. This book is incredible. My goal is to one day be a homesteader myself – once I can afford to move out to some land – and this book has everything to get me started. Could it be used alone? No, you might need some more manuals to help you troubleshoot problems and have more detailed information about show more any one particular thing. But my goodness, it has more than you could imagine in there! It walks you through the planting, care, harvesting, and storage of so many different plants, includes recipes and 'how to's (like how to make bear, how to make tea, how to build a chicken coop, how to pasteurize), and it's illustrated! I'm moving from Massachusetts to a small plot of land in Louisiana this summer and I'll be starting my garden again and raising chickens. This book is going to get me through it all and tell me more than I ever could have asked. My little self is freaking out over this book!

This book is a GREAT resource for anyone with a "back to the land" kind of drive in them. Whether you want to get the most out of your vegetable garden, you want to know what you'd have to do to raise meat, you want to make your own dairy products, or you want to know how to forage!, this book is for you!!
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Excellent beginner urban/suburban homesteaders resource. Introduces you to everything that's possible even on a small piece of land. My city doesn't allow for all of these ideas, but I'm implementing those that I can do and am very excited about it.

This year I did a very successful test garden an implemented a lot of other ideas from the book: built coldframes, started making bread and sourdough, made yogurt, got a dwarf apple (self pollinating) and raspberries established, started show more dehydrating, got a grain mill, began sprouting again for winter, and added 2 rabbits (although I'm vegetarian so I got angoras for spinning fiber and fertilizer).

I'm very excited to expand my garden to the rest of the yard this year and try some of the other ideas the book has tempted me with. It's inspired me to do more research on my own and go even further, adding skills like spinning and soapmaking in an effort to life as self-sufficiently as city living will allow.
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This is an excellent first or second book for someone interested in homesteading or mini-farming. It's a Reader's Digest-style compendium of selected chunks of dozens of Storey Publishing titles, so every chapter is written by an expert. It covers vegetable gardening, fruits and nuts, herbs, grains, poultry, meat, and wild foods.

The subtitle on the cover is “Produce all the food you need on just a quarter acre!” The introductory chapter gives a nice overview of preliminary considerations show more (Start here or move? What will the neighbors think? Are chickens legal here?) and suggests some mini-farm layouts for 1/10, 1/4, and 1/2 of an acre. While this may make the target audience seem to be urban or suburban homesteaders, the majority of the book can be applied to any size yard. show less
I picked this one up at a church book sale. My nine-year-old and I have looked through it, and while it's unlikely we're going to put livestock in our suburban yard (except maybe chickens), I can see us using some of Madigan's suggestions. It certainly has been interesting reading about how, with careful management, a fairly small piece of land can yield one heck of a lot of food.

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Statistics

Works
2
Members
1,399
Popularity
#18,363
Rating
3.9
Reviews
9
ISBNs
4

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