Do you know every gardening technique and rule of thumb off pat? Or do you occasionally straighten up from your digging to try and remember exactly what you're meant to be doing? How deep should you plant these bulbs? Was it now you were supposed to prune this rose, or in February? Can you compost this weed? Is it OK to plant out these seedlings now? It's such a pain having to go indoors, kick off your boots, shed your outdoor clothes and start looking up the answer to your question in some great gardening tome. And that's where The Gardener's Pocket Bible comes in. Now, you can stay in the garden and look up all those essential facts and figures in an instant. At your fingertips you'll have all the answers to your on-the-spot questions such as: Which plants do you need to protect from frost? When should you cut the hedge? What plants need staking, and when? How can you get rid of greenfly without using pesticides? This indispensible little guide will tell you what you need to know, when you need to know it - and will save you thumbing through gardening encyclopedias when what you actually want to do is get on with the gardening.This beautiful hardback edition has both dust-cover and gold embossing on the spine making it the perfect gift. Every Pocket Bible is lovingly crafted to give you a unique mix of useful references, handy tips and fascinating trivia that will enlighten and entertain you at every page. There is a Pocket Bible for everyone...Other titles in the series: The Outdoor Pocket Bible, The Camping Pocket Bible, The London Pocket Bible, The Camping Pocket Bible and The Railway Pocket Bible.
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The Gardener's Pocket Bible provides everything you could possibly need to know about gardening, including essential facts and figures, from frost facts to wildlife gardening. Designed so that all the information you need is in one pocket-sized book, it allows you to spend less time researching, and more time gardening.
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Do you know every gardening technique are rule of thumb off pat? Or do you occasionally straighten up from digging to try and remember exactly what you're meant to be doing? How deep should you plant these bulbs? Are you supposed to prune this rose now, or in February? Can you compost this weed? Is it OK to plant these seedlings now? The Gardener's Pocket Bible gives you on-the-spot answers to all of your questions such as: * Which plants do you need to protect from frost? * When should you cut the hedge? * What plants needs staking, and when? * How can you get rid of greenfly without using pesticides? This indispensable little guide will tell you what you need to know, when you need to know it.
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Little-known secrets to help any garden or gardener
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Gardener's glossary Gardening is one of those occupations which is overgrown with jargon. If you're serious as a gardener you won't get away with using simple words like dig, plant and weed. Oh, no. Plant enthusiasts practise a whole vocabulary of strange activities, some of which you hardly like to ask about, from top dressing to pricking out, hardening off and bedding out. So that you can translate the backs of seed packets and the pages of gardening guides, here's a glossary of the most common gardening terms you'll find in this book and elsewhere. (We have tried not to insult your intelligence by defining terms such as flower, or spade.) Acid soil- Soil with pH content below 7 (good for e.g. heather, rhododendron, gentian) Activator- In composting, an ingredient which stimulates and accelerates the composting process (unfortunately there isn't yet an ingredient which stimulates and accelerates the gardener to get on with the less appealing garden jobs) Alkaline soil- Soil with pH content above 7 (good for e.g. clematis, poppy, fuchsia) Alpine- Plant which, in the wild, grows between the treeline and the snowline so hardy and usually small Annual- A plant that lives for one year only Bedding plant- A plant used for mass planting of the same type for instant display such as in parks, roundabouts etc (not one grown to stuff mattresses with) Biennial- A plant that flowers only in its second year and dies after flowering. Some plants are not true biennials but are grown as such e.g. wallflower, forget-menot, sweet William Brassica- Member of the large cruciferae family of vegetables including cabbages, cauliflower, Brussels sprouts, broccoli, kale Chit- Encouraging tubers such as potatoes to sprout before planting by exposing them to maximum daylight somewhere cool but frost free Compost- Has two meanings: a) a mixture of different soils and nutrients b) rotted vegetable matter or farmyard manure Cordon- Way of pruning that restricts a plant to a single main stem Corm- A swollen stem base below the ground which stores food reserves. Unlike a bulb it isn't layered, but the whole is covered in papery scales
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781905410491
Publisert
2008-10-06
Utgiver
Vendor
Crimson Publishing
Vekt
220 gr
Høyde
188 mm
Bredde
120 mm
Dybde
24 mm
Aldersnivå
00, G, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
192

Forfatter

Om bidragsyterne

Roni Jay is a professional author who writes on a range of subjects. Somewhere in the past she also trained as a chef. She lives in Devon with her three young children. Her previous books include Recipes for Disasters and The Gardener's Pocket Bible.