Good book for advice?

Anything to do with growing herbs and vegetables goes here.
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Masco&Bongo
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Good book for advice?

Post: # 21368Post Masco&Bongo »

Hi guys

Can anyone recommend a good/useful book for a total novice?

I need something which tells me when/how to plant fruit/veg/herbs etc and how to prepare the soil etc.

Does such a book exist? :lol:

Thanks!

ina
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Post: # 21371Post ina »

I'd say there are several books that would be suitable! Depends on much you want to spend, too...

My "bible" for everything from soil to compost and rotation etc is the Encyclopedia of Organic Gardening, published by the HDRA. I think I paid £25 for it, but if I remember correctly, I've seen that they now have a cheaper paperback edition. It's a large book with useful pictures.
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Post: # 21380Post albert onglebod »

The Allotment Handbook by Caroline Foley is another nice one.

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Andy Hamilton
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Post: # 21423Post Andy Hamilton »

The best bet is to go to a charity shop, they always have loads of old gardening books and not matter how much they get rewritten a bean still gets planted at the same time.
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Post: # 21425Post 2steps »

The vegtable expert by Dr D.G.Hessayon. I have a few books but that is the only one I use. I have the pocket edition so I can take it out with me too :lol: it has what I think are squished greenfly on the inside cover :oops:

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John Seymour

Post: # 21427Post Martin »

John Seymour's Classic "Complete guide to self sufficiency" - had an original version in 1973, just got the new updated version- this guy wrote the book, and lived the life years before the Fearnley-Whittingstalls and Strawbridges of this world-rightly, a classic, about £18 off the net! :wink:
http://solarwind.org.uk - a small company in Sussex sourcing, supplying, and fitting alternative energy products.
Amateurs encouraged - very keen prices and friendly helpful service!

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Post: # 21536Post danchamp »

Another vote for the Vegetable Expert by Dr Hessayon. I also really like Sarah Raven's book The Great Vegetable Plot - it's got the best tomato growing advice I've seen in a book.

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Post: # 21541Post Hillbilly »

No suggestions as I do it all from the sagely words of others but you could also try www.readitswapit.com and swap a book you have for a gardening one you don;t. Saves money, and paper, and trees....

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hedgewizard
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Post: # 21555Post hedgewizard »

Those Expert books are all very heavy on chemicals and fertilizers, although apparently the new editions are supposed to be better. Anyone seen these?

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Post: # 21589Post danchamp »

hedgewizard wrote:Those Expert books are all very heavy on chemicals and fertilizers...
That's very true. We're chemical-free so I just ignore those bits and tend to use it to plan a sowing and planting schedule more than anything else, but it's solution to any problem seems to be "spray with X, Y and Z".

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Millie
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Post: # 21772Post Millie »

Its not a book, but Ive found this a good one to keep in my faves:

http://www.gardenaction.co.uk/fruit_veg ... lanner.asp

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Post: # 21785Post Andy Hamilton »

Probally be a bit late but I am putting together a competition to win the 21st century smallholder by Paul Waddington. It is a pretty good book too and you might just win it.

I agree with those expert books, I rarely use mine now. Too many chems.
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Post: # 21825Post Millymollymandy »

I have an old RHS book I refer to. I just ignore the chemicals bit. I don't know what sulfate of this or that is anyway!

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