Good book about allotments?

Started by Smileyk, July 02, 2007, 10:15:17

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Smileyk

I was thinking of getting a book about allotments which has info about what to plant and when and how etc.  We have the Delia book about growing your own veg but that is mainly a : plant this, harvest this, here are some recipes book.

There are a few on Amazon with good reviews but I didn't know which one to get.

Any suggestions?

Thanks :D

Smileyk


Oldmanofthewoods

Allotment gardening - Susan Berger

Has a good calendar

Have a quick read in the bookshop and see if you like it.

Jack

Jack's in the Green.

cornykev

MAY THE CORN BE WITH YOU.

Tee Gee

Dare I mention it? but there is quite a good calendar here that might help http://tinyurl.com/yn57zu

norfolklass

I have the Susan Berger book (it was the first one I bought) and it is very good.
I also bought Carol Klein's Grow Your Own veg (only £4.99 from www.thebookpeople.co.uk) because it was so cheap.
I really didn't think much of the TV series but I have to say that the book is really good. at least two pages per veg, photos of the seed (v helpful when you're a newbie!), when to plant, how to plant, common pests and diseases, etc. etc.

just checked and it's still on sale for £4.99.
I think the postage was free, too!

Crash

You only need one book and that is Grow your own vegetables by Joy Larkcom!

SnooziSuzi

I'm using a combination of A4A, How to Garden ISBN 183097958 (Jonathan Edwards - probably not the athelete!), The Complete New Book Of Self Sufficiency ISBN 9780751364422 (John Seymour) and a whole newsagents worth of gardening mags!

;D
SnooziSuzi
Acting my shoe size, not my age!

Robert_Brenchley

Quote from: SnooziSuzi on July 05, 2007, 22:25:55
How to Garden ISBN 183097958 (Jonathan Edwards - probably not the athelete!),
;D

As long as it's not the preacher! 'Weeds in the hands of an Angry God' might not be too practical.

betty6

hello, im a newbie here but have had allotment for a year now, i have a few books, including carol klien, but the book that got me on track was the half hour allotment by lia leendertz, helped me focus on time managing and what to grow
just reading here has helped a lot though

saddad

Hello Betty6 and welcome to the Madhouse!
;D

SnooziSuzi

SnooziSuzi
Acting my shoe size, not my age!

ninnyscrops

When I got my first plot an old stager recommended Caroline Foley - An Allotment Handbook.  I still refer to it after 3 years  :)
If I ever get it all right - then that's the time to quit.

betty6

hello all
dont often get time to do this but as nature wont let me near allotment its nice to still talk about it

manicscousers

hiya, betty6, pull up a computer and get comfy  ;D

lorna


cornykev

MAY THE CORN BE WITH YOU.

SnooziSuzi

On the subject of good gardening books,  my grandad (sadly passed away) used to have a week-to-view diary every year which would have handy tips every week but I haven't been able to find one like this.  Apart from the Allotment Journal which OliveOil has (had!) copies of does anyone know where I could get one of these from?  ???

Have tried the usual suspecs:  WHSmith and Woolies.
SnooziSuzi
Acting my shoe size, not my age!

grawrc

I've got Joy Larkcom which is excellent and detailed. I also have the Cariline Foley one which is also good. Andi Clevely's book "The allotment book" is very pretty but adds nothing to the other two IMHO apart from that. And it's pricier than the other two. I was given it for my birthday last year but was a bit shocked when I saw the price.

pye

#18
Another vote for the excellent Joy Larkcom.

The only problem is that it doesn't cover fruit.
You been goofin' with the bees?

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