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Felder Rushing

Author of Passalong Plants

20 Works 508 Members 10 Reviews

About the Author

Felder Rushing is an eleventh-generation American gardener, a non-stuffy horticulturist who travels the world looking for simple garden approaches, which he promotes in his newspaper columns, books, magazine articles, and NPR radio program. The author of over twenty books and founder of Slow show more Gardening, he was named by Southern Living as one of "25 people most likely to change the South." show less

Includes the name: Felder Rushing

Image credit: Photo by Frank McMains

Works by Felder Rushing

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Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1952-06-19
Gender
male
Places of residence
Mississippi, USA
Lancashire, England, UK
Map Location
USA

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Reviews

10 reviews
(This review was originally written for The Garden Bloggers' Book club)

My middle name should be “Procrastination”. I have a real talent for finding seemingly valid excuses to not do what it is that I am supposed to be doing. Only the threat of a looming deadline spurs me to action. I finished reading the April/May selection, “Passalong Plants” in April. I will spare you the list of pressing chores that “prevented” me from writing my review until now, just a few short days ahead show more the May 30 deadline.

I was tempted to buy this book years ago when I became interested in heirlooms. The fact that it was about “southern” passalongs discouraged me from doing so. New Jersey is one growing zone north of what is considered “southern”. There are classic southern plants that can be grown here in sheltered locations but all it takes is a colder than normal winter and those delicate immigrants succumb.

Thanks to global warming, my zone 6 garden is now closer to zone 7, the northern-most “southern” growing zone. Colder than normal winter temperatures are rare now. I am more open to the idea of growing plants that are considered borderline in zone 6. I got out a pad and pen, ready to take notes as I dove into a whole new world of plants via “Passalong Plants”.

The authors, Steve Bender and Felder Rushing, have chosen to tell a story about each plant rather than just describing it. Southern gardeners and their gardens come alive through their anecdotes. The reader comes away from the book with much better “pictures” of these old-time favorites than any photograph (which are supplied in abundance throughout the text).

The essays can be read in any order. They are helpfully arranged according to the characteristics of the plants so that, for instance, if you are looking for fragrant plants, there is a section on those alone. There are also groupings of essays on plants that are aggressive spreaders, the most common “passalongs”, plants with strange characteristics (such as “naked ladies” and walking iris), plants with garish colored flowers and bare root shrub passalongs that are commonly sold in nurseries.

By far my favorite section was on yard art. I don’t “get” bottle trees but plastic animals, painted rocks and especially tire planters took me back in time to my childhood in largely rural upstate New York. The book ends with a chapter devoted to organizing plant swaps for your own passalongs.

I finished the book and realized that my pad was empty. I had been too caught up in the stories to stop and take notes. It’s on my bookshelf now, waiting for winter when I am making decisions about what to plant next year. I will page through it again in my constant quest to plant something new.
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Fun and stimulating. Unfortunately the trippy chaos of the book's layout, and the faint typography -- approaching illegibility -- keep me from bestowing the fifth star which the book would otherwise deserve for its content
Felder Rushing is a godsend to hapless wanna-be gardeners in Florida. He lays out what plants will work in what conditions in a very straightforward and humorous style. My yard looks better because of this book.
Not a bad little book, but still nothing special. It felt more like a mish mash of articles and other blurbs, possibly from other books, that had already been written. I didn't pick up a cohesive theme....though I'm pretty easy to please when it comes to gardening fare. Having said that, I really didn't learn anything new here, although for a novice gardener it might be packed with food for thought

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Works
20
Members
508
Popularity
#48,805
Rating
3.9
Reviews
10
ISBNs
21

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