The beginner's guide to starting a garden 326 fast, easy, affordable ways to transform your yard one project at a time

Sally Roth

Book - 2017

"The prospect of revamping a yard is daunting. Where do you start? How do all the various areas come together in a beautiful, cohesive way? The Beginner's Guide to Starting a Garden simplifies the process by showing you how to spend fewer hours (and a minimal amount of money) in the garden by tackling one small area at a time. You'll find garden plans for ten unique areas--the entryway, the shady areas under trees, and more--that can be linked together over time to create a unified yard, and plants that are dependable, easy to find, and look good year after year. You'll also learn the basics of good design, which plants offer the most bloom for your buck, and how to avoid the most common planting mistakes,"--Amazon....com.

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Location Call Number   Status
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Subjects
Published
Portland, Oregon : Timber Press 2017.
Language
English
Main Author
Sally Roth (author)
Physical Description
282 pages : color illustrations ; 26 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 258-259) and index.
ISBN
9781604696745
  • A Lifetime of Learning
  • A Building Block Garden Primer
  • Twelve Easy Small Gardens: First Impressions at the Lamppost
  • A Welcome Garden At the Entrance
  • A Pretty Frame At the Corners
  • Dress up a Tree Shady Spots
  • Between Neighbors Private or Pretty?
  • Cheerful Color In the Lawn
  • An Ever-Expanding Garden Extending the Edges
  • A Beckoning Bench Gathering Places and Sitting Spots
  • Sidewalk Slip Creating Curb Appeal
  • Lots of Pots a Can't-Miss Container Garden
  • Artist's Canvas Gardening on Slopes
  • Now You See it, Now You Don't Dealing with Eyesores
  • Gardening Secrets Top Ten Ways to Save Time and Money
  • Resources
  • Further Reading
  • Photography Credits
  • Index
Review by Library Journal Review

Nature writer Roth's (Backyard Bird Feeder's Bible) latest covers principles of establishing a home garden in simple stages. The material is organized into a straightforward format highlighting over 300 ideas that address ways to beautify a typical residential lawn. The emphasis throughout is on affordability. Techniques explain how to get the best results for gardeners' time and efforts. The well-illustrated text is filled with basic advice on which many professional landscapers rely. Each chapter covers ways to avoid common design blunders and future problems, how to incorporate elements for added flair, suitable plant choices and combinations, and whether certain projects and materials will be worth the cost. Roth offers solutions for softening the visual impact of common eyesores, such as utility poles, and for working with challenging areas, such as steep slopes. VERDICT This is a thorough examination of how to organize and construct a basic home landscape by dividing the work into small projects. As the title indicates, the material is easy to follow for gardeners of all experience levels. A broad range of hobbyists and do-it-yourself landscapers should find this book to be a very reliable resource.-Deborah A. Broocker, Georgia Perimeter Coll. Lib., Dunwoody © Copyright 2016. 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.

Introduction: A Lifetime of Learning I learned how to garden at my mother's knee--literally. "I'm going outside for a while," she'd announce, and I'd follow along, hurrying to get my little red wagon, so I could help haul plants or weeds or rocks. Her gardens were gorgeous. And ever changing, as she transplanted things a few inches left or right, or all the way across the yard. I can still see her standing back, squinting, to check the look of what she was creating. "Needs more yellow, right there," she'd say, pointing. Then she'd reach for the shovel to move a blooming clump of coreopsis daisies then and there. Every year, her flower beds got bigger, and the lawn got smaller. Meanwhile, I absorbed the art of gardening, and the how-tos of transplanting, dividing, and otherwise making more of a good thing. Garden centers were almost unheard of back then, so Mom got most of her plants from friends and neighbors. Oh, you could send away for plants through the mail, but that cost money, and Mom was a penny-pincher. Having gone through the Great Depression, she never took money for granted. Sixty years later, I still remember which precious plants she had sent away for, because those words became part of their name: "The smokebush I sent away for." "The 'Peace' rose I sent away for." "The climbing 'Don Juan' [rose] I sent away for." That was the grand total, until I grew up and visiting the garden centers and nurseries then springing up all over became a weekly outing for Mom and me. Every summer, my mom broke off a spray of her beloved smokebush to put in the old white ironstone pitcher. "Smell," she'd urge me. "Doesn't it smell good?" I can still conjure the distinctive scent. Some plants were growing around the hundred-year-old house when my parents bought it in the 1930s, like peonies, old "lemon lily" daylilies (Hemerocallis flava), lily-of-the-valley, and a few pink "live forever" sedums. And Mom made more of those plants, as well as plants she'd received from friends, saving seeds, slicing off starts, and rooting cuttings. She managed to plant our whole acre with lush gardens that probably cost her a total of $100 over the decades. My mom was a big fan of native plants, which were called wildflowers in her day. All natives are beautiful, but some are too understated to stand out. Black-eyed Susans, here with native blue California phacelia (Phacelia tanacetifolia), make a conspicuous splash. It was a gardening education, but I didn't realize that until I left home and started my own garden. Then I was the one talking the leg off anyone who stopped to admire what I was doing. "The hollyhocks? Those came from Mom's yard--she always called them 'outhouse flowers,'" I'd say, laughing. "See these babies? The big ones seed themselves! Here, let me dig you a few. "And those are the columbines I started from Katie's seeds. Hers were pink and white, but some of mine came out dark purple! Don't you love that color?" Then I'd stand back and squint at the bed. "Needs more yellow..." Excerpted from The Beginner's Guide to Starting a Garden: 326 Fast, Easy, Affordable Ways to Transform Your Yard One Project at a Time by Sally Roth 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.