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List Price: £8.99
Our Price: £0.01
Author:
Barbara Kingsolver, Steven L. Hopp, Camille Kingslover
By Faber and Faber
How come I didn't notice all the smugness? , 2008-09-10 A few other reviews have drawn attention to Barbara Kingsolver's "smugness", including one person who liked the book but doesn't want her round for dinner.
I'm usually really sensitive to people being a bit too pleased with themselves, but I didn't think this book was like that at all. I thought it was touchingly hilarious about the weeks that they ended up just bottling tomatoes for days on end. And I loved all the information about intensive farming, agribusiness seed companies, and terminator genes - like a good article in the Sunday paper.
Most of all I found the book really inspiring. It made me pay attention to where my food came from, much more than I already did. I have always tried to eat seasonally and avoided food imports, but I found myself really being intrigued by her model, where you stuff your face with a couple of foodstuffs until you are heartily sick of them, by which time something else is coming into season. It's just such a different way of doing things. I don't know if it'll ever totally catch (back?) on, but my god, she makes a persuasive case.
List Price: £5.99
Our Price: £2.92
Author:
Masanobu Fukuoka
By Other India Press
Subtle agriculture for a world in crisis, 2008-04-16 Masanobu Fukuoka defies western or modern agricultural techniques going down to the basics of traditional japanese life. No chemicals and no digging the land for an abundant and long term harvest. Planting with the heart. Mindfulness...
The book and Masanobu himself impressed me and I find myself following his path like that of a guru.
List Price: £19.95
Our Price: £13.97
By The Crowood Press Ltd
Very useful reference, 2007-06-30 My main source of information - lots of background and explanation but the most useful condensed section at the back - practical and concise info on planting, management, harvest and storing by vegetable type.
List Price: £19.95
Our Price: £9.15
Author:
Eliot Coleman
By Chelsea Green Pub Co
Difficult to find a better book than this, 2004-01-22 Practical idealists, the Shakers demonstrated that it is possible for man to create the environment and way of life he wants, not by complaining about the system but by building their own domain arranged to their liking. Eliot Coleman, farm manager of the Mountain School Program of Milton Academy in Vershire, Vermont, has demonstrated that it is possible to undertake small-scale, commercial farming and gardening without the use of harmful pesticides by using cost-effective, environmentally sustainable methods to produce spectacular results with economy of effort and means. By offering a wealth of ideas; by identifying the most efficient and practical machinery and tools; by offering simple and efficient production techniques; and advising on the most remunerative marketing methods, this book is for the gardener and small farmer who has an unfulfilled dream to established an organic enterprise with minimal expense. When low cost production methods are allied with the right machinery and marketing practices, the viability of the 1-5 acre farm producing high quality food is not only possible but also enjoyable and profitable. The advantage enjoyed by the small farmer is quality. If the product is first class and in demand and you are a dependable supplier at reasonable cost there is never a problem finding customers. But it needs hard work and intelligence. When starting in the era of 'get big or get out' there were almost no models of commercially successful organic small farmers to provide inspiration and ideas and where they existed it was exhausting and neither cost effective nor efficient. But by seeking out the best from different parts of the world Coleman found the optimum to be about 2.5 acres per grower - enough to produce quality vegetables for 100 people. Produce from the school farm now set the quality standards for the area. He learned much from Helen and Scott Nearing - they were the most practically organized country people he has met - especially their skills in observation and planning. Coleman sets out the year's work on paper during the winter and has a notebook with sections for each crop. He rotates crops until he finds the optimum - the single most important practice in a multi-cropping program. "The 8-year rotation presented below is a good one to conclude with because it is the one I have followed since 1982. It has been well tested. I have thought about modifying it countless times but never have. Its virtues always seem to outweigh its defects, although that isn't to say it can't be improved. I'm sure it can. But it has been a dependable producer and I offer it here as a tried-and-true example of a successful rotational sequence that incorporates many crop benefits. The goal of this particular rotation is to grow 32 vegetable crops in adequate quantities to feed for a year the community of 60-some people who eat daily in the Mountain School dining hall. Since we have found that we can feed 40 people per acre, the rotation below represents 1.5 acres of land. The salad crops not included here are grown in a separate small salad garden close to the kitchen." However, the author points out that tomatoes do better being grown in the same place each year fertilized by their own waste. Factors that affect plant growth - light, moisture, temperature, soil fertility, mineral balance, biotic life, weeds, pests, seeds, labor, planning and skill - need to be arranged to the plant's liking with the grower coordinating and combining them into a harmonious whole much like the conductor of an orchestra. Successful farmers understand that their role is to help the seed do what it is already determined to do. Good farming practices such as crop rotation, animal manures, green manures, cover crops, mixed cropping, mixed stocking, legumes, crop residues, and season extension have been used for generations, but removing the limiting factors to plant growth and generating a balanced soil fertility are ultimately the secret of success. There are 22 chapters, each one dealing with an important element of success such as green manures, tillage, direct seeding, transplanting, weeds, pests, harvest, marketing, season extension. In addition there are three appendices on tools, the major vegetable crops and a one-page schematic outline of biological agriculture. If you plan to buy just one book on organic growing, you will find it difficult to beat this book.
List Price: £19.95
Our Price: £12.57
Author:
Gareth Davies, Becky Turner
By The Crowood Press Ltd
From the Perspective of an Organic Market Gardener, 2008-08-31 Visitors to our vegetable plot this season often remark about how clean the crops look, and my reply is, " you are right, you won't find any weeds here mate ", which of course is not strictly true. It does however show that after 21 years of growing here at Longmeadow we have learnt how to keep on top of the little blighters before they start to affect the crops and set seed. Our weed tolerance is low, but after years of looking at other people's organic vegetable holdings, I have noted that everybody seems to have a different level of tolerance. This is not only due to the grower's perennial problem of lack of time during the main growing season to keep on top of everything. Lack of experience, particularly when starting out is another major factor, and this book has a lot of very useful information to help with this. If only it was around when Patsy and I started out! It must be said that like many things, there is no substitute for hands-on experience in the field.
After the introduction that addresses the principles of weed management on organic farms, the next chapter covers ways in which farmers and growers can prevent weed problems arising through crop planning and rotations. It give a whole range of options, examples being, fertility building leys, break crops, cover crops, living mulches, intercropping, under sowing and fallowing. Seed rates, crop spacing, primary, secondry and tertiary tillage are also discussed. Quite a lengthy chapter follows on direct weed control, with all the latest information on the never-ending variety of mechanical and flame weeders, although I think that there could have been more coverage of the latter. This of course begs the question whether any book covering such a wide range of subjects can go into sufficient detail on all the topics. I think not, so keep sending those articles into the OGA journal!
The economics of weed management follows this, the information given being particularly useful for larger growers and farmers. I must add that we have never lost or given up on a crop because of the effort and cost of weeding it , although we are relatively small growers. There is a short bit on the environmental cost and carbon foot print of weeding, (again this needs covering in greater depth), one of the examples given is the energy use in flame weeding and inter-row work in carrots that uses twice the MJ/ha that conventional herbicide treatment uses! On the other hand this ratio is reversed for farmers comb weeding winter wheat compared to conventional spraying.
The chapter, by far the longest in the book, describing the weeds in their different categories in some detail, for me was the most fascinating. For instance, the fact that, a single plant one of our two most prominent weeds, Prickly Sow-Thistle, (the other being Groundsel), can shed between 20 and 60000 seeds that can emerge from March to November. This makes me break out into a cold sweat, and coupled with the fact that it is such a bastard to get out the ground once rooted, you can appreciate just what we are all up against! With groundsel, the book rightly points out as I have found from experience, that after the two leaf stage, the seedlings are tolerant of flame weeding.
The book ends with specific weed management strategies for different systems and crops and for growers the main field vegetable crops are covered. In conclusion I would like to say, given the subject matter, how readable, well laid out and succinct the book is. Highly recommended.
List Price: £25.00
Our Price: £12.58
Author:
Ross Conrad
By Chelsea Green Publishing Co
organic methods, 2008-08-25 This is one of the best bee books ever written!
We read up on a number before undertaking a beekeeping course. the author's approach is organic and holistic and the care of the bee is first and foremost. Varroa and various other mites/diseases are entirely avoidable if the surroundings are right.....
Read and bee changed.
List Price: £6.99
Our Price: £3.65
Author:
Maria Thun, Matthias K. Thun
By Floris Books
multi-purpose calender, 2008-09-06 not only will this help you to grow healthier, tastier and stonger fruit, veg and house plants, but once you get the hang of it you can generally predict the weather better than the BBC. Its been spot on for my last 2 holidays in Cornwall and it gets Glastonbury festival right every year.
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