One Magic Square: The Easy, Organic Way to Grow Your Own Food on a 3-Foot Square

by Lolo Houbein

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Description

A Hands-On Guide to Growing Organic Vegetables, Fruits and Herbs—Starting with Just One Square Yard!

Lolo Houbein has been growing food for more than 30 years—and now, drawing on her wide learning and hard-earned experience, she offers a wealth of information on how to turn small plots of land into sources of nourishing, inexpensive, organic food. Amateur gardeners wondering how to get started and veteran gardeners looking for new ideas will be inspired by Houbein's practical, often show more charming, and always optimistic advice. One Magic Square includes:

  • Earth-friendly tips, tricks, and solutions for establishing and maintaining an organic garden
  • Illustrated, annotated plans for 30 plots with different themes—including perennials and "pick-and-come-again" plants, anti-cancer and anti-oxidant rich vegetables, and salad, pizza, pasta, and stir-fry ingredients
  • Comprehensive information about every plant in every plot
  • Color photographs of the author's own garden—plus helpful illustrations
  • Houbein family recipes for making the most of your bounty—including salad dressings, fruit and vegetable juices, stir-fries, and more!
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Member Reviews

3 reviews
I really like the plot designs in this book, and the fact that the author lives in the same city as me is really nice too. It took me another read-through to appreciate how well laid-out many of the plots are, and I look forward to using them in my garden this year.
Ok but for the serious gardener - I found it a bit to labour intensive for me, but it will give a good idea on "how to' tips.
I love compost. I dislike spending money and fossil fuel. This book's instructions for starting a bed are to pick up:
- a bag of mushroom or other compost
- a bag of organic potting soil
- a bale or pack of straw
- a bag of animal manure
- a small bag of gypsum for clay soil
- a tiny bag of lime for acidic soil
- organic fertilizer pellets or liquid seaweed fertilizer.
Maybe I'm just not the right audience for this book? But who is? Who likes spending money and fossil fuel they don't have to, in order to grow their own food organically?

The chapter on composting is just a ragbag assembly of possible methods. There is no information about when or why you might want to use on of them instead of another. And several are just bad: the old circle of show more chicken wire trick is in here, with no advice on how to handle chicken wire without stabbing yourself. Houbein suggests making compost in "two plastic laundry baskets lined with wet newspaper and covered with doormats held down by a brick". You'd be picking bits of laundry basket and doormat out of your compost forever. I think the worst advice in this section is "Using a Riding Lawnmower to Make Compost." Don't do this. Don't burn fuel and clog your mower driving over piles "prunings from the ornamental garden; weeds, except bad ones likely to regrow from pieces; leaves; very thin bark; a bag of animal manure; a small bag of lime (you only need handfuls); other organic material, like spoiled hay; fallen branches no thicker than your finger." Disassembling and mixing those materials is what composting does.

There is a three-page chapter called "Easy-Care Fruit Trees" which contains no information on how to care for fruit trees easily. Houbein describes a Shaker method, which requires immense amounts of material and physical labor before you begin. Then there's a page on espaliering. Then a page on netting. That's it! That's the whole chapter! That's where I gave up.
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Author Information

11 Works 209 Members
Lolo Houbein lives and gardens in the Adelaide Hills of Australia. Cofounder of Trees for Life, and an environmental activist for many years, she has written a dozen books on love, life, travel, and food.

Common Knowledge

Original publication date
2008

Classifications

Genres
Home & Garden, Nonfiction, General Nonfiction
DDC/MDS
635.0484Applied science & technologyAgricultureGarden crops (Horticulture)modified standard subdivisionsCultivation, harvestingSpecial methods of cultivationOrganic gardening
LCC
SB453.5 .H68AgricultureHorticulture. Plant propagation. Plant breedingPlant culture
BISAC

Statistics

Members
137
Popularity
238,155
Reviews
3
Rating
(3.75)
Languages
English
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
6