Plant grow harvest repeat Grow a bounty of vegetables, fruits, and flowers by mastering the art of succession planting

Meg McAndrews Cowden

Book - 2022

"Chapter 1 will focus on succession in the landscape, including lessons from prairies and woodlands. Chapter 2 moves on to how succession can work in the garden. Chapter 3 is about how to "layer" succession onto the home landscape, and the final chapter talks about the foundations of successful succession planting. This approach to gardening has not been explored in such depth and detail in other books; the link between natural processes and the garden should appeal to a wide spectrum of gardeners"--

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Subjects
Genres
Handbooks and manuals
Published
Portland, Oregon : Timber Press, Inc 2022.
Language
English
Main Author
Meg McAndrews Cowden (author)
Physical Description
287 pages : color illustrations ; 23 cm
Bibliography
Includes glossary, bibliographical references (page 277), and index.
ISBN
9781643260617
  • Succession across the landscape
  • Mastering succession
  • Edible perennials in the food garden
  • Vegetable successions in the food garden
  • Flower power
  • Tending the soil
  • Seed starting and garden planning
  • Spring ahead: hastening the growing season
  • Annual flower successions in the food garden
  • The art of interplanting
  • Garden renewal: succession planting in summer
  • The fall garden and extending the harvest.
Review by Booklist Review

The author's efforts to wring as much production as possible from her home garden during Minnesota's short growing season begat this inventive, commonsensible, effectively illustrated guide. Cowden advises fellow gardeners in extending and deepening their own growing seasons through succession planting, interplanting, sowing seeds indoors for early plantings (and harvests!), and the liberal use of outdoor coverings. While the somewhat loose organization will be helped by an expected index, Cowden still offers a bounty of pull-out tables listing and describing varieties of fruits and veggies (e.g., strawberries, native edible trees, brassicas, beans, cucumbers, and tomatoes), with a laser focus on timing: days to maturity, early- and late-season succession timetables, seasonal task lists, even succession of annual flowers, which attract all-important pollinators. Cowden nicely embellishes her text with advice on, for example, making a pot out of newspaper and how many years it takes various fruit plants to produce (strawberries take one, pears seven). A useful guide for readers in any hardiness zone, but especially those whose growing season is pinched--and just in time for the 2022 growing year.

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

Seed to Fork blogger Cowden debuts with a comprehensive guide to succession gardening, a method that focuses on how "various ecosystems succeed one another across generations." The program involves fostering "plant diversity of both perennials and annuals to weather seasonal challenges with ease," Cowden writes, and after surveying what lessons the wild has to teach about growth (prairies grow "modestly in the shoulder seasons and robustly in summer"), the author moves to the home garden, for both food and flowers. She offers advice for interplanting (rather than overplanting), interspersing flowers (marigolds make "willing companions" in food gardens), direct sowing (it's a "marathon, not a sprint"), getting the right amount of sunlight, and gardening year-round ("let your seasons bump into one another"). As well, Cowden provides directions for making organic fertilizer and for no-till soil tending, and attracting insects and pollinators. The photos are gorgeous and inspiring, as is her writing: "The garden is never static except in photos," she writes, and "succession gardening is a way of life, an act of hope and renewal." This master class will entice seasoned gardeners and newbies alike. (Mar.)

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