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Herb Gardening For Dummies®
 
 

Herb Gardening For Dummies® [Kindle Edition]

Suzanne DeJohn , Karan Davis Cutler , Kathleen Fisher , National Gardening Association

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Product Description

Product Description

A plain-English guide to the world of herb gardening

Starting an herb garden isn't free, but it certainly outweighs the growing costs of buying retail herbs. Plus, adding homegrown ingredients to your meals is a healthy and tasty way to improve upon any dish you whip up at home.

This friendly, hands-on guide is an excellent introduction to the world of herb gardening. It gives you tips and advice to grow a thriving herb garden that will add depth and flavor to home-cooked meals-as well as boost your health.

  • How to choose, plant, and care for herbs
  • Covers ready-made versus homemade soil mixes, starting plants from seeds, and other fundamentals
  • How to prevent insects, pests, and diseases from invading your containers
  • Over 30 herb recipes for everyday uses, including rubs, marinades, beauty products, and more

Whether you're interested in getting step-by-step instructions for starting on your first herb garden or already have one and want to learn new tips and techniques, Herb Gardening For Dummies, 2nd Edition has you covered!

From the Back Cover

Grow, care for, preserve, and use healthful herbs

Starting an herb garden outweighs the costs of buying retail herbs. Plus, adding homegrown ingredients to your meals is a healthy and tasty way to improve any dish you make at home. This friendly, hands–on guide gives you tips and advice on how to grow a thriving herb garden that will add depth and flavor to home–cooked meals — as well as boost your health.

  • Herbs 101 — get the 4–1–1 on the basics of growing herbs and the botany principles that′ll help them thrive

  • Know before you grow — make a garden plan based on your unique growing conditions and herb preferences

  • Get down to the nitty–gritty — discover how to plant your seeds indoors, when to move them outdoors, and how to care for and maintain them as they grow

  • Reap what you sow — find out how to harvest and preserve your herbs and get yummy recipes to use them in your culinary concoctions

Open the book and find:

  • How to grow herbs in gardens, containers, and on windowsills

  • Culinary herbs, medicinal herbs, and herbs for health and beauty

  • Experts tips on what to grow

  • Design basics for herb gardens

  • The lowdown on soil

  • Guidance on how to choose seeds

  • How to cut and dry herbs

  • Delicious recipes

  • An encyclopedia of herbs


Product details

  • Format: Kindle Edition
  • File Size: 6196 KB
  • Print Length: 395 pages
  • Page Numbers Source ISBN: 0470617780
  • Publisher: For Dummies; 2 edition (2 Nov 2010)
  • Sold by: Amazon Media EU S.ą r.l.
  • Language English
  • ASIN: B004APA77C
  • Text-to-Speech: Enabled
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #287,518 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
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More About the Author

Karan Davis Cutler
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Customer Reviews

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com:  19 reviews
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful
Really Good....But Better Alternative For Container Gardens 6 Mar 2011
By Ambergris - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback|Amazon Vine™ Review (What's this?)
I will admit up front that I am a self confessed Dummie book fan. I own perhaps a dozen of them ranging from bird feeding to weather. I not only find them extremely comprehensive in their particular subject matter, but also they always seem to present their material with a humorous touch thrown in. They are interesting and educational, but also amusing and entertaining as well. This latest of the series that I picked up is no exception. Herb gardening is something of an idea that I have been batting around for some time now. I'm as much into the idea of it for fun and something to do as I am the potential bounty I hopefully will receive. Which I feel I have a lot in common with other folks in that respect as to liking gardening as a hobby. My only problem when it comes to any gardening with me personally is that I have little actual acreage to deal with that can be cultivated. That, and that I also have to admit that I am lazy, and have a nice big deck just begging for a contained herb garden. Although this dummie book devotes an entire chapter to container gardening, it still falls very much short of another book I have that deals specifically with growing herbs in pots. Magee and Stuckeys book which I have enclosed a link too. The dummie book would be my first choice if your intention is to dig and maintain a full fledged ground based herb garden. It's chock full of hints, info, illustrations, step by step guides, you name it as beginning and maintaining your own. And like all dummie books I have read in the past, it begins with their assuming you have never even heard of a herb garden. If you're a little more experienced than that, you can skip a couple of the opening chapters. But I would suggest you read them anyway. Their very informative and entertaining. But if like me you are interested in keeping your herb garden of the clean, lower maintenance variety container type, I would highly suggest you check out the Magee/Stucky book which in my opinion is the quintessential guide to all forms of container gardening. The dummie book unfortunately covers it all, and just falls a little short in that area. Happy gardening!... PS: By the way, the dummie series also has a book out on container gardening as well, but I have not picked it up or read any of it yet. I have no doubt that it is probably as good as the others in the series, and I would recommend checking out the reviews on it as well. McGee & Stuckey's Bountiful Container: Create Container Gardens of Vegetables, Herbs, Fruits, and Edible Flowers
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful
Excellent Book! 17 Mar 2010
By Ann L. Mackenzie - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
This is a great book for someone planning an herb garden. There are descriptions of herbs, help in planning a garden, soil needs, plant diseases, ways to preserve herbs, info on medicinal herbs and more. I love the Dummies books because they're always well-written and informative and this book is no exception. A lot of fun to read and very helpful.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
I learned a lot! 17 Mar 2011
By Keith A. Preble - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback|Amazon Vine™ Review (What's this?)
Generally not a fan of the "...for Dummies" books because I think that they simplify things too much, but I have to admit that I learned a lot from this book. Every summer I try to grow my own herbs, and sometimes I have success and sometimes I do not. Herbs can be very nutritious when combined in dishes, and for someone like me who likes to cook, I found this book will surely be a good reference when it starts to warm up! This book really helped me to understand why some things that I grow don't succeed while others do. I also really liked the section about where the various herbs come from (didn't know that aloe was part of the onion family). Always love a book that can teach me something new. Pretty decent publication!

Popular Highlights

 (What's this?)
&quote;
that, while capable of driving bees into passionate frenzies, should be removed if you want to keep the fresh flavor of the herb and avoid lessening its health-giving components. &quote;
Highlighted by 4 Kindle users
&quote;
Turn your back on any mint, and it will overwhelm the lettuce and lay siege to the parsley. &quote;
Highlighted by 4 Kindle users
&quote;
As a rule, you can leave perennial herbs outdoors in containers all winter if they're hardy to one or two zones farther north than your home. &quote;
Highlighted by 3 Kindle users

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