Home grown gardening best perennials for sun and shade

Book - 2019

"Choosing perennials for a garden can be a daunting task, considering that there are thousands of choices. Yarrow? Columbine? Aster? To make the selection easier, this guide profiles the easiest-to-grow and best-performing perennials for both sunny and shady locations. Each plant is shown in a beautiful color photo for easy identification. The photo is accompanied by information on where and how to grow the featured plant, along with horticultural tips to assist in making the perennials-gardening adventure an enjoyable endeavor. From controlling pesky bugs and deadheading to staking tall plants and taking root cuttings, everything a beginning gardener or new homeowner needs to start a garden is here. This colorful, photo-filled book ta...kes the guesswork out of gardening. No trial and error--get it right the first time!"--Back cover.

Saved in:

2nd Floor Show me where

635.932/Home
1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor 635.932/Home Checked In
Subjects
Published
Boston ; New York : Houghton Mifflin Harcourt 2019.
Language
English
Item Description
Includes index.
Physical Description
245 pages : color illustrations ; 23 cm
ISBN
9781328620088
  • Best perennials for sun
  • Best perennials for shade.
Review by Booklist Review

This compact guide makes no claim to be as expansive as, say, Clausen and Christopher's Essential Perennials (2015), which lists some 2,700 plants in its 452 pages. Rather, it's a handbook of sure-fire varieties for the novice or tentative gardener, organized by sunny (52 listings) and shady locations (31 listings). For the latter, there's dependable sweet woodruff ( it will fit anywhere and everywhere ) along with foxglove, Japanese primrose (for especially damp locations), hakone grass, hardy begonia, lily-of-the-valley, and jack-in-the-pulpit. The sky's nearly the limit for perennials that thrive in sunshine, but those included here are easy to grow and widely available. Each double-page entry includes a full-page color photo opposite text on how and where to grow, hardiness zones, light requirements, height, and interest to the garden. And a 175-word description, from the plant's history to its uses, makes the plant that much more approachable to the gardener. A good table of contents, listing each plant, would have helped, since the entries are not alphabetized; still, this is a solid, user-friendly entrée to perennial gardening.--Alan Moores Copyright 2019 Booklist

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

This simplified guide, derived from Taylor's 50 Best Perennials for Sun and Taylor's 50 Best Perennial for Shade, highlights a selection of easy-to-grow and "best performing" perennials, "plants that persist year after year in a garden." After briefly touching on gardening basics, the book divides into two sections, making recommendations for plants that do well when exposed to at least eight hours of sun daily, and varieties that thrive in full or part shade. Each promoted specimen is awarded a two-page spread with a color photograph of the plant accompanied by a brief description, instructions for how and where to grow, and points of interest, such as the long blooming season of yarrow or dusty miller's unusual foliage-"feltlike silvery gray hairs... very soft to the touch." These tidbits are reminiscent of the information typically found on the growing labels stuck in plants at nurseries and gardening centers. The book includes the essentials, but reads like a series of PowerPoint slides. This slickly produced repackage is not likely to impress veteran gardeners, but those with less dirt on their knees may be pleased by the colorful illustrations. (May) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved