Small-space vegetable gardens Growing great edibles in containers, raised beds, and small plots

Andrea Bellamy

Book - 2014

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2nd Floor 635/Bellamy Due May 6, 2024
Subjects
Published
Portland, Oregon : Timber Press, Inc [2014]
©2014
Language
English
Main Author
Andrea Bellamy (author)
Physical Description
213 pages : color illustrations ; 23 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9781604695472
  • Finding space
  • Assessing your space
  • Design in a small area
  • Planning for planting
  • Building your garden
  • Optimizing your soil
  • Sowing and growing
  • Keeping plants healthy
  • Making the most of limited space
  • Harvesting and preparing for next year.
Review by Booklist Review

*Starred Review* As soaring food prices intersect with food surety and safety concerns, more and more people are using apartment balconies as sites for container gardens and, in all settings, discovering the benefits of using flower pots rather than backyard plots. Bellamy's user-friendly, super-comprehensive volume emphasizes first things first: finding and assessing space. She also stresses having fun as an inspiration for planting edibles, along with all the other excellent reasons behind the movement to grow your own organically: to save money, to be self-sufficient, and to cultivate healthy and delicious food. Bellamy writes, I do it because it feels great. I love working outside and getting my hands dirty . . . connecting with other gardeners and . . . harvesting something I have grown and eating it fresh that night for dinner. Careful design and planning are essential, and Bellamy explains why. She follows inspiration with instruction in sections on soil optimization, sowing and growing, maintaining plants' health, maximizing the usefulness of limited space, harvesting, and more. Bellamy provides an A-Z (apples to zucchini) guide to edibles and many ancillary sources of information, all accompanied by delightful illustrations and scrumptious color photographs to create a one-stop guide to vegetable gardens sure to encourage and please many aspiring and veteran gardeners.--Scott, Whitney Copyright 2014 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

This handy volume dispels the notion that raised-bed gardens and container gardening are for amateurs. To the contrary, Bellamy (Sugar Snaps and Strawberries) makes the case that small-scale gardening offers the opportunity to experience the fullness of horticultural possibility in defined and proportionate spaces. Through charts, illustrations, and to-do lists, she demonstrates that container gardens are just the right size to be manageable and to explore the entire cycle of gardening, from seed to harvest. Beginning with the rudimentary aspects of the nature of soil, the usefulness of mulch, and the making of compost, she explains the unique conditions for starting seeds and, later, for plant maintenance, including guidelines about watering. From there, post-harvest, the section on saving and storing seeds and propagating can encourage the gardener to keep the garden going perpetually. Finally, at season's end, when all is harvested and seeds stored, the section on winter protection and cleaning tools brings the process full circle. Bellamy has written an inspiring and practical guide to sprouting life in the nooks and corners of unused land. (Dec.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

The growing interest in tending edibles in tight spots leaves both new and seasoned gardeners with a need for guidance on fostering food and plants within nontraditional spaces, such as in balcony containers or in beds perched on rooftops. While the body of gardening materials available today is not lacking in titles focusing on spatial constraints, what differentiates Bellamy's (Sugar Snaps and Strawberries: Simple Solutions for Creating Your Own Small-Space Edible Garden) latest is its organizational structure and magazinelike feel, which make it a hybrid of an "idea book" and a strong survey of the craft of small-space gardening. Organic techniques are encouraged by nature, rather than as a means of marketing. Full-color, annotated photographs provide inspiration and illustration while concise, well-written text offer instruction. The book culminates in a directory of fruits and vegetables, including each plant's scientific name, a color photo, and growing and harvesting information. Although the title lacks a list of further reading to provide its audience with a springboard, there is a bibliography, a metric conversion chart, and an index. VERDICT Recommended for readers interested in gardening on a smaller scale or growing food where lack of physical space is challenging.-Nerissa Kuebrich, Chicago (c) Copyright 2014. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Preface All around us, a movement is taking place. People are rigging up window boxes for growing herbs, making room on the fire escape for a pot of tomatoes, renovating neglected flowerbeds to make way for raspberries and rhubarb, and convincing landlords to turn over a few square feet of lawn for food production. Families are joining waitlists for community garden plots, signing up for canning workshops, and getting to know their local growers at the farmers' market. The economy, self-sufficiency, sustainability, taste, health--whatever your reasons, it is always a good time to grow your own organic food. And you can do it, no matter how small your gardening space. I grow food for all these reasons, but most of all I do it because it feels great. I love working outside and getting my hands dirty. I love connecting with other gardeners and sharing seeds and ideas. And I love harvesting something I have grown and eating it fresh that night for dinner. Yes, it is local food--really local food. But mainly it's just good food. For me, gardening has been a lifelong obsession and an experiment in trial and error. Lots of error. And, believe it or not, that is something I love about growing food--it keeps me on my toes. Just when I think I've finally mastered this urban farming thing, nature proves me wrong. The key, I think, is to pay attention--to celebrate each perfect potato, learn from mistakes, and, above all, enjoy the process. This book walks you through the basics--and then some--of planning, creating, and tending an organic food garden in a small space. This is the book I wish I'd had when I was a new gardener, and I hope it will be a helpful resource and an inspiration to you. Most of all, I hope you get hooked on gardening and growing your own good food.   Excerpted from Small-Space Vegetable Gardens: Growing Great Edibles in Containers, Raised Beds, and Small Plots by Andrea Bellamy All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.