Ivydene Gardens Library Catalogue: Garden Planting Design Books - S-T |
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Each entry, where possible, has an International Standard Book Number (ISBN) to assist you in locating a copy. In order to assist the design process for a garden, the Library has been split into the following order of abstraction:-
The Reference Library and the Practical Projects categories will assist with construction. Private garden maintenance can then be assisted by the following:-
Please note that entries in the library pages in red text indicate books that Chris Garnons-Williams has found to be more useful than the others in that section. |
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Title |
ISBN |
Author |
Pictures of |
Content |
Short Cuts to Great Gardens |
1-85029-395-3 |
Nigel Colborn |
Gardens and plans |
Ideas to reduce the lead time to maturity in your garden. Short cuts planting schemes for hot spot, dry shade, annuals, exposed, bog and water, container and wild gardens. Short-cut good description plant list |
Success with House Plants |
0-89577-052-0 |
Reader's Digest |
Houseplants |
Good descriptions of houseplants with maintenance instructions, some with colour photo. Good essay on how to use plants indoors and another on how to maintain them. |
Take the Hard Work Out of Gardening |
0-340-55002-3 |
Consumers' Association |
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How to create an easy-care garden by stages with lists of plants |
Taylor's Guide to Bulbs |
0-395-40449-5 |
Taylor |
466 bulbs |
466 good descriptions, also name, height, flower length, hardiness, sun/shade, blooming time period data with its colour photo. Flower chart. Garden design with bulb plans, and bulb suggestions for different gardens |
The Art of Planting |
0-460-04640-3 |
Graham Stuart Thomas |
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150 pages of plant lists for different purposes. Planting design methodology |
The BBC Gardeners' World Directory |
0-563-37154-4 |
Geoff Hamilton |
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Lists to aid the gardener from the BBC Gardeners' World team |
The Beekeeper's Garden |
0-7136-3023-X |
Ted Hooper & Mike Taylor |
Plants for bees |
Beginner's bee-keeping data, planning a bee garden, good descriptions of bee plants and hedges |
The Border Book |
0-7513-0084-5 |
Anna Pavord |
Plants and plant schemes |
Demystifies the art of creating effective plant associations and provides a diversity of border planting plans with good descriptions of plants with colour photos for those sites. Lists of plants for different sites |
The City Gardener |
0-00-715568-9 |
Matt James |
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A city garden is usually small and this books gives lists of plants that do well as well as ones to avoid as bad or ugly. |
The Cottage Gardener's Companion A seasonal guide to plants & plantings for informal gardens |
0-7153-0020-2 |
Clive Lane of the Cottage Garden Society |
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Cottage garden Plant associations. Essays on spring, summer, autumn and winter plants. Great book for cottage garden plants |
The Flower Arranger's Garden Month-by-Month |
0-7153-0296-5 |
Leila Aitken |
Line drawings |
Garden flowers for arranging table with flower colour group/plant name row and flowering season month column. Good description of flower arrangers garden plants for each month with 2 practical flower arrangement projects |
The Flower Colour Directory |
0-00-412655-6 |
John Dale and Kevin Gunnell |
1000 plants |
Instructions on planting for colour. Good descriptions of plants split into 9 colours, yellow, orange, red, pink, purple, blue, green, white and assorted colours. |
The Flower Garden Planner |
0-224-02218-0 |
Ethne Clarke |
140 garden plant press-out illustrations |
140 press-out flower illustrations with good descriptions. Open folds of the border page, press out the plants selected and "plant" in 3 rows of border to give colour and shape of proposed garden |
The Garden Bench |
1-85145-785-2 |
Mirabel Osler |
Garden Seats |
Pictures of different garden seats |
The Garden Bird Book |
0-333-33151-6 |
David Glue |
Birds |
Plants useful to birds' list. Essay on bird garden design |
The Gardener's Guide to Bulbs |
1-8573-2178-2 |
Brian Mathew Philip Swindells |
Bulbs |
750 Good descriptions of spring, summer, autumn and winter bulbs. Advice on how and where to use bulbs with planting schemes |
The Gardening Which? Guide to Small Gardens |
0-85202-587-4 |
Ruth Chivers |
Gardens and planting plans |
16 Design ideas for small gardens with hard landscaping and planting planning |
The Gardens of Gertrude Jekyll |
0-7112-0746-1 |
Richard Bisgrove |
Gardens and planting plans |
Jekyll plants chapter gives the benefit that derives from a disciplined and positive use of a few good plants at a time. Bisgrove has selected the best of jekyll's plans, analyzed and interpreted them to explain jekyll's design ideas and methodology |
The HDRA Encyclopedia of Organic Gardening. |
0-7513-3381-6 |
Pauline Pears |
300 pictures |
The complete guide to natural & chemical-free gardening. |
US Darwin Awards are bestowed, honoring their least evolved citizens …. The Ann Arbor News crime column reported that a man walked into a Burger King in Ypsilanti, Michigan at 5 A.M., flashed a gun, and demanded cash. The clerk turned him down because he said he couldn't open the cash register without a food order. When the man ordered onion rings, the clerk said they weren't available for breakfast... The man, frustrated, walked away. [*A 5-STAR STUPIDITY AWARD WINNER] |
Site design and content copyright ©December 2006. Page structure amended October 2012. Text altered to Verdana 10 pt Blue December 2023 as is being done to the remainder of this website. Chris Garnons-Williams. DISCLAIMER: Links to external sites are provided as a courtesy to visitors. Ivydene Horticultural Services are not responsible for the content and/or quality of external web sites linked from this site.
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Library Pages
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The Garden Style chosen at the beginning defines what a garden should look like. Following this choice of Garden Style, then:-
Plant Association shows which plant combinations give pleasing flower or foliage colour combinations, then Plant Type gives growing conditions of a family of plants - ie Primulas - with lists of primulas with the same flower colour, foliage colour or height and where is suitable for those plants, followed by Plant Species gives data about a family of plants in a restricted format - ie without lists - as the lowest level of useful information (unless you are prepared to read the text in a whole book each time you want to use this particular species of plant).
Gardening gives general information on how to garden for the whole garden. Garden Cultivation gives specific information on veg, fruit, lawn, pond, etc. Garden Pests details garden pests/diseases and their control.
Practical Projects gives details on how to construct hard landscaping. |
THE 2 EUREKA EFFECT PAGES FOR UNDERSTANDING SOIL AND HOW PLANTS INTERACT WITH IT OUT OF 15,000:-
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when I do not have my own or ones from mail-order nursery photos , then from March 2016, if you want to start from the uppermost design levels through to your choice of cultivated and wildflower plants to change your Plant Selection Process then use the following galleries:-
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There are other pages on Plants which bloom in each month of the year in this website:-
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EU Directive No. 456179 |
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Offbeat Glossary B DuLally Bird |
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Offbeat Glossary G |
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Ground Cover Herbs from Seed I often get asked what herbs are suited as ground covers. Customers tell me, "I hate cutting grass," or "I like trying something completely different, and I don't mind if my neighbours think I'm crazy to dig up my lawn." Herbal ground covers are very different, but their pleasing leaf textures and often showy masses of colour are becoming more popular in place of grass. Being the tough little critters they are, they need next to no care once established. And if you don't mind foliage and flowers that tickle your ankles and beyond, you can dispense with the weekly trysts with the lawnmower to keep things trim and proper. The biggest problem with herbal lawns is the start up cost. Regrettably, some of the finest low growing herbs are only increased by cuttings or division – the flowerless variety of english chamomile, Treneague, is a notable example. You need the payroll of a CEO to afford enough plants for an instant lawn. Or, you need the patience for many seasons of divide and spread to cover much ground starting with a few plants. Fortunately there are several good choices for herbs you can grow from seed. By far the most popular is wild thyme (Thymus praecox subsp. articus), also known as mother-of-thyme. It grows 4 to 6 inches high, has masses of rose-pink flowers in July, and grows fast enough to crowd out weeds. At 110,000 seeds per ounce, the seeds are very fine, much smaller than grass seeds, so it is a good idea to mix seeds with a filler like sand to avoid dropping 90% of your seed in 10% of the area to be covered. We recommend an ounce of seed per 1000 square feet. In the kitchen wild thyme is not commonly regarded as a culinary herb in North America, but European cooks have long used it in meat dishes just like the more famous English and French thymes (Thymus vulgaris). If nothing else, wild thyme will at least drive you from drink should you dare to consumer alcohol and the leaves at the same time. The combination causes a mother-of-a-hangover! Another popular choice for lawnless lawns is yarrow (Achillea millefolium). While its white, red or pink flowering stalks can reach a foot in height, its dense, many-divided leaves make for a cushion lawn that just invites a picnic, a snooze or other prostrate activities. I have seen yarrow used very successfully in small urban settings. especially under partial shade. If the flowers get too high, one or two runs a season with the lawnmower will keep things in check. Yarrow seeds are small and light, lighter than wild thyme. there are 175,000 seeds per ounce, and an ounce per 2500 square feet is the recommended sowing rate. Yarrow tea is insurance for colds and flus, which is a good thing if you are going to lie around in your lawn a lot. If you don't mind a more rangy and taller cover, Fassen's catnip (Nepeta x faassenii) is a good aromatic choice, growing up to 12 inches in height. Don't worry, cats are not as enamoured by this variety as they are by the much taller growing regular catnip (Nepeta cataria). Sow an ounce per 600 square feet. Roman chamomile (Chamaemelum nobile) is a good choice for warmer, sunny locales. It is a perennial, hardy to zone 6, with finely divided emerald leaves. The small daisy-like flowers are, of course, used to make the popular herbal tea. Be forewarned, there are those who insist that tea made from the Roman (sometimes also known as 'English') is superior to the annual German or Hungarian variety (Matricaria recutita), and there are others who argue just as strenuously the other way. As sides ten to fall along ethnic lines, we prefer to stay out of the debate! In any case, a Roman chamomile lawn is pure enchantment in many landscape settings. Again the seed are very fine – 155,000 per ounce – and one ounce will cover 2000 square feet. As with all seeds this small, it is crucial not to plant too deep; best simply to press the seeds, once broadcast, into the soil using a board or other object with a flat surface. |
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