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Hardcover The Complete Container Garden Book

ISBN: 0895778483

ISBN13: 9780895778482

The Complete Container Garden

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good

$6.99
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Book Overview

Whether your idea of a garden is a small city window ledge or a lush country garden, here are all the basics of container gardening explained. Includes an extensive directory of more than 1000 plants... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

6 ratings

couldn't be happier with this purchase

I am looking for ideas about container gardening for my minuscule patio ... this book is perfect ... beautiful photos of plants in containers, how to's and a index of plants, plus zone info ... sort of a Sunset Western Garden book, but just for container gardening. It is from Reader's Digest. It is a hard cover book in excellent shape ... and for under $10 (inc ship and tax). Very happy with it.

Going To Pot (s)

Well, I was going to entitle my review, Contain Yourself, but I can see that's actually a real title of a container gardening book. I've always had a green thumb. Even as a teenager. I used to grow stuff in my closet all the time with a grow light and a water drip and all that stuff. Of course, the day that the feds came and confiscated my closet garden is another story for another day... But I'm in my 40s now and I was beginning to think that my age was just synonomous for a "ho-hum" existence because the only herbs I grow now are tarragon, basil, oregano, and parsley. You could probably smoke these too, but I don't want to have hallucinations of Chef Boyordee. The house that I am currently renting has a very long breezeway between the garage and the house. When I first looked at it, I found it horribly unattractive. I almost didn't rent the house because of it, but I had to follow my own advice and "look beyond the appearances" and realize with "real eyes" that I could do something to beautify that awkward breezeway. So I got a few container gardening books...this being my favorite and learned what plants should be grouped with others for dramatic as well as beautiful effects. I also became obsessed with finding unusual containers to put my plants in. Oh, I have the standard terra cotta pots but I also found some pretty unusual containers that I have turned into planters, my favorite being an old rusty army steel soup tureen that I simply drilled a few holes in the bottom. It's quite the conversation piece. I now love that breezeway. I'm always out there planting, digging, and just enjoying the sheer beauty of nature. Emerson was quite right when he said, "To the dull mind, all nature is leaden; to the illuminated soul, the whole world burns and sparkles with Light" because when I'm sitting in my container garden early in the morning, I can see the Beautiful, Wondrous Light that all creation is made in and out of. Know that you're also part of this Light. Get this wonderful book and learn how not only to transform a dull area into a thing of beauty, but learn how to invigorate a ho-hum existence into something joyfully radiant. Peace and Blessings, you "pot" heads... john, "the Light Coach"

Gorgeous photos and brilliant ideas

From small pots to window boxes to tubs and improvised containers, color photographs display a staggering array of containers while the text discusses advantages and disadvantages from aesthetics to expense and durability. Joyce gives instructions for decorating planters and choosing soil mixes, watering, pruning, propogating and winterizing. Much of the book is devoted to particular plantings ? directions for alpine gardens, hanging cascades of fuchsia, late winter bulbs, foliage contrasts, various color arrangements. Each model planting is accompanied by a list of needed materials and plants and a planting diagram. Joyce concludes with a descriptive and illustrated list of plants and foliage suited to container growing, arranged by color. Other lists include aromatics, shade-tolerant plants, pool plants, dwarf bulbs, flowering shrubs and more. This is a comprehensive guide with lots of ideas.

Essential for your garden book collection!

This book has it all! It has practical tips for container planting, maintainence, topiary, and inspiration. It does emphasize ornemental plantings, but it really does offer a well-rounded approach to container gardening. It has lots of eye-candy to boot! Who can beat that? The best of both worlds, informational, and artistic.My only complaint is that it does not always say what the light requirements for the plants presented, but the container blue-print section makes up for that in some degree. A good staple for container gardening.

Great addition....

Charleston South Carolina is a beautiful place, but the thing I like the best about that little city is the gardens. Every garden has containers, and every house seemed to have window boxes or containers on porches. The British also seem to have a penchant for growing plants in containers. The alleys that lie behind the houses in Royal Tunbridge Wells are loaded with potted plants.It you are a potted plant fancier like me, this is the book for you. This is a fine book, a beautiful book, a heavy book. Physically, it probably belongs on the coffee table -- it's too pretty to take out back and smear with manure and sand as you try to replicate the various contained gardens. On the other hand, this book is destined to be outside, it's extremely useful in the garden.Containers are not just for apartment dwellers with balconies. As my yard fills up with this and that, and I look for new ways to hold plants, I have looked up. Contained gardens can be plopped on the patio or into the middle of a patch, but they can also be hung or mounted on walls, porch or balcony railings, and under windows. Containers can be the familiar red clay pot or the familiar red clay pot with a paint job. This book tells you how to paint your pots, shape your boxes, or mold your 'stone-like' containers. Almost anything can be a container with the right preparation. And what to plant? This book indicates the only constraint is your imagination. To get your imagination going, the book contains multiple diagrams that show you which plants to use, how to plant them and other necessary instructions. The back of the book contains a long list of plants suitable for container growing. Each item in the list is described in several paragraphs.The book gives you information for growing things all year round. I have been exchanging my pansies for summer plants every year, but next spring, I intend to grow bulbs in containers.

WONDERFUL, and BEAUTIFUL guide to gardening

I recently got married and decided that I wanted to start gardening. But, I don't have a garden. I just have a very large deck on our new apartment. I have always wanted to decorate a deck or patio and windows with beautiful flowers. I just haven't ever known how. I found this book at a local book store and it has all the information you would ever need to know to set up your garden without a garden. It has beautiful pictures of container arrangements. But the best part is that in addition to the pictures it has diagrams of how to duplicate the arrangement. The book has wonderful instructions for someone like me who doesn't know anything about gardening. I just took my book to my local nursery and showed them what I wanted. I took it home and now I have the beautiful deck I have always wanted. What a fun new hobby! I highly recommend this book. I bought another container gardening book by Rebecca Cole and sent it back. It just didn't have the helpful information that I needed like this book has.
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