Product Details
Amazing Annuals

Amazing Annuals
By Marjorie Mason Hogue

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Product Description

Amazing Annuals is the long-awaited guide to the best of these new plants: more than 300 container and garden plants including the newest annuals, the latest bulbs, complete instructions for growing plants from seed to cutting and much more.

Contents

- Introduction

About Annuals
- What is an Annual?
- The Contained Garden

The Plants
- Cutting Edge Annuals
- Tender Perennials Grown from Cuttings
- Tender Bulbs
- Climbers and Trailers
- Flamboyant Foliage
- Annuals Grown from Seed

- Culture and Propagation

- Selected Sources of Annuals
- Glossary
- Index


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #779337 in Books
  • Published on: 1999-03-01
  • Original language: English
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 160 pages

Editorial Reviews

From Library Journal
At first glance, these books appear similar: they cover the same ground, offer stunning photographs, and are written by well-qualified authors and lecturers. Hogue owns a specialty nursery near Toronto and appears frequently on radio and television. Clarke (Gardening with Foliage Plants, LJ 6/1/97) is known internationally as a lecturer on garden history and design. But the books are very different in tone, approach, and style. Amazing Annuals is a practical reference source that begins with an essay on the origins and uses of annuals. Hogue provides lists of annuals for various situations, then discusses color, fragrance, and container gardening. The core of the book is an alphabetical list of annuals, with descriptions, color photos, and growing conditions. Hogue gives good instructions for starting annuals from seed, pointing out that it is the only way to escape the limited variety offered as plants by garden centers. An extensive chart at the end of the book lists even more annuals than are included in the photo section, with description, height, colors, moisture, soil, light requirements, germination, and comments. Selected sources of annuals in North America, England, and on the Internet are included. Three Seasons of Summer is written in a narrative style that is at times poetic and includes anecdotes and personal experiences. Heuff's breathtaking photographs show annuals growing in borders, potagers, meadows, and containers, often in two-page spreads. They illustrate combinations of colors, textures, and heights, taking the reader from early spring through late fall. Although Clarke now lives in Texas, this is an English gardening book and not practical for North American gardeners. But in any case this is not a how-to book, instead providing pleasure and inspiration that can be translated to other environments. Both titles introduce readers to new annuals and provide creative ideas for their use. If your budget only allows one book, Amazing Annuals is the better choice for North American libraries.ACarol Cubberley, Univ. of Southern Mississippi, Hattiesburg
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Booklist
Hogue divides her discussion of 300 plants into sections on cutting-edge annuals, tender bulbs, climbers and trailers, flamboyant foliage, and annuals grown from seed. There is a chapter on growing plants in containers and one on culture and propagation (deadheading, insect control, collecting seeds, transplanting, etc.). There are tips on choosing plants for height, moisture, color, and light. Completing the volume is a glossary of plant terminology, and augmenting the text are more than 100 lovely color photographs. George Cohen

Review
Excellent essay on the origins and uses of annuals ... discussion of more than 300 annuals. (Philip Oliver Library Journal 19990501)

Augmenting the text are more than 100 lovely color photographs. (George Cohen Booklist 19991127)

The author share her knowledge gained from 30 years' experience and her enthusiasm for working with garden plants. (Ken Smith London Free Press 19991210)

A revelation ... Superbly reproduced illustrations complete the book. (Robert Howard Hamilton Spectator 20000701)

Writing style is interesting... the reader does not want to put down until it is read from cover to cover. (Roy Taggert Down to Earth [Newfoundland Horticultural Society] 20000101)

This excellent book, which offers valuable information on the culture and propagation of plants, is recommended for public libraries. (Barbara B. Aitken Canadian Book Review Annual )