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Brooklyn Botanic Garden

Author of America's Garden Book

111 Works 2,179 Members 9 Reviews

About the Author

Image credit: ronsaari.com

Series

Works by Brooklyn Botanic Garden

America's Garden Book (1958) 329 copies
Going Native (2001) 62 copies
Butterfly Gardens (2001) 61 copies
Native Perennials (2001) 49 copies
The Natural Water Garden (2001) 47 copies
BBG Record: Herbs v14 n02 (1958) 44 copies
Bird Gardens (2001) 44 copies
Woodland Gardens (1995) 44 copies
Starting From Seed (2001) 43 copies
Tantalizing Tomatoes (1997) 39 copies
Old-Fashioned Flowers (2001) 36 copies
Kitchen Gardens (2001) 36 copies
Growing Bonsai Indoors (2008) — Corporate Author — 33 copies
Japanese-Inspired Gardens (2001) 33 copies
Chile Peppers (2001) 32 copies
Landscaping Indoors (2000) 29 copies
Easy Lawns (2001) 28 copies
Easy-Care Roses (2001) 27 copies
Shrubs (1998) 25 copies
Handbook on Ferns (1952) 22 copies
BBG Record: Annuals v48 n04 (1992) 19 copies
Low-Maintenance Gardening (1983) 18 copies
BBG Record: Mulches v13 n01 (1957) 18 copies
Gardening with Wild Flowers (1974) 17 copies
BBG Record: Bulbs v15 n03 (1959) 13 copies
BBG Record: Roses v36 n01 (1990) 13 copies
BBG Record: Soils v12 n01 (1956) 8 copies
BBG Record: Bulbs v37 n03 (1981) 5 copies
Roses 4 copies
BBG Record: Vines v10 n01 (1954) 4 copies
Leaflet 1 copy

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Gender
n/a
Nationality
USA

Members

Reviews

 
Flagged
PTArts | Oct 6, 2021 |
Turning Your Yard into hummingbird heaven
 
Flagged
jhawn | Jul 31, 2017 |
Borrowed from library. Very useful!
See also: How to Compost (Earth Machine): http://www.earthmachine.com/how_to_compost.html
See also: US Composting Council fact sheet: http://arlingtonma.gov/home/showdocument?id=22663

Notes:

List of common compostables (dry, carbon-rich browns and wet, nitrogen-rich greens), p.34-35

Composting techniques: pit composting, trench composting, digester composting, sheet composting, p. 42-43

Make sure your bin is "rodent resistant," p. 58

A good fork for turning your compost is probably the first tool you should buy - and could be the last. p. 59

Tip for composting in the north & central states with long cold winters: shred dry leaves in the fall and keep them on hand to add to the pile throughout the winter (to mix in with kitchen scraps). p. 69

Micro-composting: use a pot or planter (or use two, for different stages of composting). Make sure there are drainage holes in the bottom and a cover on top. Use old soil, newspaper, other absorbent materials on the bottom to get started. p. 81

Other micro-compost options: window boxes, compost towers, garbage cans, laundry hampers, commercial bins and tumblers, worm bins, p. 83
… (more)
 
Flagged
JennyArch | Apr 27, 2017 |

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Statistics

Works
111
Members
2,179
Popularity
#11,761
Rating
½ 3.6
Reviews
9
ISBNs
56

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