Small-space vegetable gardens : growing great edibles in containers, raised beds, and small plots
(Book)

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Published
Portland, Oregon : Timber Press, [2014].
ISBN
9781604695472, 1604695471
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"Size matters! Andrea Bellamy shares creative ways to grow a wide array of vegetables, fruits, and herbs in diminutive settings, year-round." -Debra Prinzing, author, speaker, and podcaster Small-Space Vegetable Gardens explains the basics of growing a bounty of edibles in a minimal amount of space. Andrea Bellamy shares all the knowledge she's gained from years of gardening small. You'll learn how to find and assess a space, how to plan and build a garden, and how to sow, grow, and harvest the 60 best edible plants. This hardworking and enthusiastic guide will help you take advantage of the space you have-whether it's a balcony, a patio, a plot in a community garden, or even a small yard-to create the food garden of your dreams.   You can grow vegetables anywhere, including balconies, porches, walls, or wherever you find room. InSmall-Space Vegetable Gardens Andrea Bellamy explains how to grow a bounty of delicious edibles in a minimal amount of space. Andrea Bellamy is the creator of Heavy Petal, a blog devoted to urban organic gardening. She has a certificate in garden design from the University of British Columbia and studied permaculture methods for food production at an urban microfarm. She has been gardening since childhood and has grown food on rooftops, balconies, boulevards, and patios, and in community garden beds, window boxes, traffic circles, frontyards, and backyards. She is the Grow Food columnist for Edible Vancouver magazine, and her writing has appeared in a number of online and print publications. She lives in Vancouver, Canada, with her husband and daughter. Preface All around us, a movement is taking place. People are rigging up window boxes for growing herbs, making room on the fire escape for a pot of tomatoes, renovating neglected flowerbeds to make way for raspberries and rhubarb, and convincing landlords to turn over a few square feet of lawn for food production. Families are joining waitlists for community garden plots, signing up for canning workshops, and getting to know their local growers at the farmers' market. The economy, self-sufficiency, sustainability, taste, health-whatever your reasons, it is always a good time to grow your own organic food. And you can do it, no matter how small your gardening space. I grow food for all these reasons, but most of all I do it because it feels great. I love working outside and getting my hands dirty. I love connecting with other gardeners and sharing seeds and ideas. And I love harvesting something I have grown and eating it fresh that night for dinner. Yes, it is local food-really local food. But mainly it's just good food. For me, gardening has been a lifelong obsession and an experiment in trial and error. Lots of error. And, believe it or not, that is something I love about growing food-it keeps me on my toes. Just when I think I've finally mastered this urban farming thing, nature proves me wrong. The key, I think, is to pay attention-to celebrate each perfect potato, learn from mistakes, and, above all, enjoy the process. This book walks you through the basics-and then some-of planning, creating, and tending an organic food garden in a small space. This is the book I wish I'd had when I was a new gardener, and I hope it will be a helpful resource and an inspiration to you. Most of all, I hope you get hooked on gardening and growing your own good food.   Maximize fresh harvests in minimal space.   Grow your own delicious food in any space-no matter how small. Andrea Bellamy, of the award-winning blog Heavy Petal, shares a wealth of knowledge from years of gardening small. Learn how to plan and build your garden-on balconies, in raised beds, up walls, across parking strips, and more-as well as how to sow, grow, and harvest an abundance of fresh fruits and vegetables all season long. With a comprehensive A to Z of edibles, including the best small-space va

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Batavia Public Library District - Adult Nonfiction635 BELOn Shelf
Berwyn Public Library - Stacks635 BELOn Shelf
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Calumet City Public Library - Nonfiction635 BELOn Shelf
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Published
Portland, Oregon : Timber Press, [2014].
Format
Book
Physical Desc
213 pages : color illustrations ; 23 cm
Language
English
ISBN
9781604695472, 1604695471

Notes

General Note
This work incorporates portions of "Sugar snaps and strawberries" copyright © 2010 by Andrea Bellamy.
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.

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Citations

APA Citation, 7th Edition (style guide)

Bellamy, A. (2014). Small-space vegetable gardens: growing great edibles in containers, raised beds, and small plots . Timber Press.

Chicago / Turabian - Author Date Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)

Bellamy, Andrea. 2014. Small-space Vegetable Gardens: Growing Great Edibles in Containers, Raised Beds, and Small Plots. Portland, Oregon: Timber Press.

Chicago / Turabian - Humanities (Notes and Bibliography) Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)

Bellamy, Andrea. Small-space Vegetable Gardens: Growing Great Edibles in Containers, Raised Beds, and Small Plots Portland, Oregon: Timber Press, 2014.

Harvard Citation (style guide)

Bellamy, A. (2014). Small-space vegetable gardens: growing great edibles in containers, raised beds, and small plots. Portland, Oregon: Timber Press.

MLA Citation, 9th Edition (style guide)

Bellamy, Andrea. Small-space Vegetable Gardens: Growing Great Edibles in Containers, Raised Beds, and Small Plots Timber Press, 2014.

Note! Citations contain only title, author, edition, publisher, and year published. Citations should be used as a guideline and should be double checked for accuracy. Citation formats are based on standards as of August 2021.

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