Offers the elements of garden design necessary for an organic program, as well as companion plant ideas, cultivation and troubleshooting, fun extras such as rose recipes, and a timely organic... This description may be from another edition of this product.
The extensive photos with full description of roses makes this book worth the price alone. I also really liked the pages devoted to the "Quick Reference Chart" that gives each roses' qualities (size, fragrance, color, repeat bloom, etc). (minor point: Crepescule, a wonderful heirloom rose seems to be missing). This book is a MUST for every heirloom rose gardener south of the Mason-Dixon line including California of course :-)
Pragmatic with a dash of humor....
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 23 years ago
You might want to read THE ORGANIC ROSE GARDEN by Liz Druitt even if you aren't planning on growing roses. Druitt has a wonderful sense of humor. For example, she says the rugosa rose must require a great deal of nitrogen since it has thorns designed to extract human blood. Each of the entries for her list of 100 is written in a friendly, helpful, and folksy way, helpful and not hokey.Druitt's book contains a handy "Quick Reference Chart for Garden Form" with information organized by height: name; color; fragrance (***); size; repeat bloom; hips; shade tolerance; and Best in zones (4-9). The entries for roses in alpha order follow this chart. Since ROSES was written for organic gardening, the reader is advised on organic methods. In a section entitled "Getting and Planting Roses" she describes the preliminary tasks the gardener must undertake to ensure she starts with good stock. She covers purchasing, layering, planting in containers and climbing roses. In "Maintaining the Roses" the reader learns about weeding, watering, fertilizing, pruning and seasonal care. In "Trouble Shooting" the author deals with pests. Because this is an organic book we learn about beneficial insects, nectary and shelter plants, and hedgerow barriers (to keep out the deer). Pests include the neighbor's dog (get a fence), fire ants (get the hormone 'Logic'); and other bugs--plant dill, garlic, or get out the hose.All in all, this book is solid gold for the new or the old rose gardener and I recommend it.
Excellent Rose Guide for the South
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 25 years ago
This book is truly excellent if you live below the Mason-Dixon line and are just starting out with roses. She gives detailed coverage of a great many roses well adapted to the South, as well as growing roses without a lot of chemicals. I like this book so much, I carry it with me when I travel (which I do 3 wks/month), which tells you something. Beautiful pictures, good details on roses and great advice. I highly recommend this esp. if you are new to roses.
excellent resource for antique roses
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 25 years ago
I found this book at our local garden center. It had nearly every rose in it that I was interested it, along with pictures and a description and history of each plant. This would make a great addition to the library of the "Rose Lover" gradener.
A must for organic rose growers.
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 26 years ago
This book is a must for the novice or experienced gardener whether organic or not. It is well written and includes background of roses, preparing the beds, designing the beds, purchasing and propagating the roses, maintaining the roses organically, organic prevention of and solutions to problems, rose classes and quick reference chart, roses that thrive in organic gardens, 175 species and cultivars and recipes for home grown organic roses. Her style of writing is clear and humorous and beautiful pictures abound. The book is 6 inches by 9 inches so is easy to haul to the garden...not the coffee table variety but the same quality. Her directions for making a compost pile illustrate her humor. "Much has been written about the use of biodynamic compost starter, and this stuff honestly does make some difference in the speed and quality of your results. Howerev, so does a regular addition of good old urine, either poured on from a collection jar or directly applied, if you have the right personal equipment for the chore. Urine is quickly transformed by the microbes into a sanitary, odorless source of mitrogen, which the composting process requires in quantity. It's cheaper than any store-bought starter and you can never add too much." I highly recommend the book....Carol Cowee
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