Timber Press Pocket Guide to Shade Perennials
|
| List Price: | CDN$ 24.95 |
| Price: | CDN$ 15.72 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $39. Details |
Availability: Usually ships in 1 to 3 weeks
Ships from and sold by Amazon.ca
Product Description
Rich with descriptions and illustrations of more than 1000 readily available species and cultivars that will enliven and thrive in your shade garden. The easy-to-read format, illustrated with more than 300 photographs, makes this the perfect handy reference. You will find definitions of shade intensities; information about plant cultivation, maintenance, and pests and diseases; as well as lists of plants for specific landscape uses. Also included is a list of specialty nursery sources that carry shade perennials.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #439374 in Books
- Published on: 2004-11-16
- Original language: English
- Binding: Paperback
- 252 pages
Editorial Reviews
Review
Offers ideas for plants that will bring year-round color to the woodland garden. Joel M. Lerner, Washington Post, July 23, 2005 (The Washington Post )
This volume is generously and gorgeously illustrated. The photographs are not only lushly beautiful but also provide instructive suggestions for grouping plants and their layout. Easy to carry and easy to get lost in, this guide will be an asset not only for experienced gardeners, but for those of us who want to become better ones. Kay Ackerman, Bloomsbury Review, March 2005 (Bloomsbury Review )
Schmid describes hundreds, all with detailed information on size, type of foliage and flowers, and how to grow them. John Van de Water, Newark Star-Ledger, March 13, 2005 (Newark Star-Ledger )
About the Author
W. George Schmid studied botany, horticulture, and landscape architecture at the University of Munich. An avid gardener of shade plants, he is author of The Genus Hosta and the award-winning An Encyclopedia of Shade Perennials. George gardens at Hosta Hill in northern Georgia.
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
In nature as well as in gardens, shade is never a constant: it depends on a fluctuating framework of trees and shrubs the bones of the garden. This shade-giving framework changes steadily and thus alters the location, timing, and intensity of the shade it provides. In time, gardeners may have too much shade. The remedies are simple. The most obvious and frequent solution is to cut down trees or tall shrubs or to resort to "limbing up" the offending trees. Some trees and most tall shrubs need periodic pruning for best performance anyway, so this pruning can be performed with ultimate shade requisites in mind. As trees and shrubs grow older, eventually they die and must be removed or storms topple them. Gardeners should be aware that their shade might disappear in spots. With the passing of time, all gardens change. For gardens without shade-giving trees, shade may be created by erecting shade houses or vine-covered pergolas. These can be rudimentary structures or they can take on a more architectural tone. As decorative, functional, and useful as they may be, these structures can never replace the living beauty of shade-giving trees and shrubs in a woodland garden. The wild woodland floor is made up of the byproducts of tree growth and organic life in the woods. Such woodland soil is to die for but rarely, if ever, is such "gardener's gold" available. In many residential areas, the suburban landscape is so thoroughly disturbed that gardeners must "create" their own soil. To take available soil and improve it to attain good physical structure and openness (a condition sometimes referred to as good tilth) is timeconsuming, labor-intensive, and often expensive. Adding organic matter to natural clay or sandy soils is essential. Among the types of organic matter suitable for gardens are ground bark, coarse sphagnum peat, or ground natural waste, such as peanut hulls or corncobs. Ground tree clippings can be obtained cheaply and are sometimes free for the taking. Gardeners can collect pine needles, leaves, or other natural waste; once composted, these materials make fine soil amendments. There is nothing better than adding humus from a gardener's compost pile. Knowing the soil is essential to making a garden. Many county extension offices of the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) provide a soil analysis service either free or for a nominal charge. Soils can be acid, alkaline, or neutral, which level is indicated by the pH number. Neutral soil is represented by pH 7. Readings above 7 indicate increasingly alkaline conditions, and those below 7 indicate increasingly acid conditions. Inexpensive pH meters are available at nurseries, so gardeners can do their own pH testing. Many shade perennials with large leaves require considerable available and constant amounts of water in the soil. These conditions can be accomplished by adding organic matter to the soil. Some soils can hold too much water. Slow-draining clay soil, for example, m


