Survival gardening Grow your own emergency food supply from seed to root cellar

Sam Coffman

Book - 2025

"Learn how to grow your own food supply with advice from a survival skills expert. This essential guide includes how to choose and grow the most nutrient-dense crops without store-bought amendments or fertilizers, how to plan for a nonstop supply, how to store food, and how to create your own seed bank"--

Saved in:
1 copy ordered
Subjects
Genres
Handbooks and manuals
Published
North Adams, MA : Storey Publishing [2025]
Language
English
Main Author
Sam Coffman (author)
Item Description
Includes index.
Physical Description
pages cm
Also available online
ISBN
9781635866469
  • Part 1. Meeting your immediate need for food
  • Part 2. Creating a resilient garden for the long haul
  • Part 3. Planning for a continual food supply
  • Part 4. Survival gardening strategies for small and urban spaces.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Coffman (Herbal Medic), a former Green Beret medic, delivers a competent guide to subsisting on home-grown crops and livestock in the event of a disaster. To acquire protein in a hurry, Coffman recommends growing broccoli and kale sprouts by soaking seeds in water, draining them, and then harvesting after five days. Detailing more long-term methods for growing produce, Coffman describes how to construct raised plots, which afford more control over soil quality than in-ground gardens, and hügelkultur beds, which are mulch mounds piled atop buried branches that help retain water. Elsewhere, Coffman details how city dwellers can construct vertical gardens by hanging planters made from plastic bottles, as well as how to raise chickens, recommending that readers provide separate areas for roosting and nesting so the eggs stay clean. The thorough guidance will help anyone who aspires to live off the land, but an appendix on the difficulties of sustaining oneself after a hurricane, drought, or nuclear disaster somewhat undermines the book's conceit. For instance, the ostensibly straightforward recommendation to find soil without "high levels of radionuclide activity" after a nuclear incident is easier said than done and reveals how self-sufficiency may offer only illusory protection from peril. Still, readers with the more modest ambition of producing more of their food will find plenty of use. (Jan.)

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