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Alan Titchmarsh How to Garden: Wildlife Gardening
Alan Titchmarsh How to Garden: Wildlife Gardening
Nov 10, 2024 12:26 PM

Author:Alan Titchmarsh

Alan Titchmarsh How to Garden: Wildlife Gardening

The most successful gardens work with nature to create natural environments in which jobs such as pollination and pest control are left to the wildlife. In this definitive guide, Alan Titchmarsh shows how to create natural ecosystems in your garden to encourage beneficial insects, birds and other wildlife and establish the best environment in which your garden will thrive.

* Design ideas and planting plans for wildlife-friendly gardens

* Wildlife gallery showing common birds, mammals, amphibians and insects and how to attract them to your garden

* How to create natural habitats

* Recommended trees, shrubs and flowers for biodiversity

* Seasonal tasks for the year

Reviews

What a lovely first cookbook this is: a fresh and tempting celebration of the joys of growing your own, and cooking what you grow. And Kathy writes beautifully.

—— Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall

This book is a seasonal treat. I feel transported into nature when I read Kathy's delightful recipes...

—— Thomasina Miers

A gentle, useful book full of inspiring, delicious recipes and guidance for kitchen gardeners. Kathy writes with a poetic, infectious wonderment at the life-enhancing magic of growing and cooking vegetables.

—— Rosie Birkett

A book full of promise.

—— Gill Meller

Not only does Kathy Slack write beautifully, but she also takes stunning photographs with a strong sense of place, light dappling across the pages.

—— delicious

Thoroughly researched, insightful and comprehensive… This book is a rattling good read that reveals a new and broad perspective on one of the most intriguing aspects of British garden and wartime history.

—— Toby Musgrove , The Garden

This fascinating book is rather like an extremely rich fruit cake, densely packed with all sorts of ingredients. It's tempting to pick through it and extract your favourite bits, but eventually you realise that eating the entire thing is actually more satisfying... An immensely rewarding read.

—— BBC Countryfile

A narrative that is always engaging, sometimes astonishing, by turns hilarious, outrageous and deeply moving.

—— Hortus magazine

A well-researched and evocative account of how Britain's gardeners fought the Second World War.

—— The Countryman

[An] engaging history... All sorts of people found solace in creating small regions of abundance and fertility, a counter to the annihilating wastefulness of war.

—— Olivia Laing , Observer

[A Green And Pleasant Land is] this year's most stimulating work of Horticultural History...an exhaustively researched, possibly definitive, and occasionally myth-dispelling account of the role of gardeners, amateur and professional, in World War II.

—— Morning Star

Fascinating . . . [Buchan’s] narrative, together with a collection of well-researched first-hand accounts, takes us on a journey that starts with 1930s Britain (where gardens and allotments had little significance in everyday life), through the war years that encouraged every citizen to grow their own and provide for their families. It ends with what happened in the desperate post-war years that saw potatoes and bread being rationed. An absorbing read.

—— English Garden

Buchan has done a lot of work to show how gardening became a war time survival tool . . . Powerful

—— Independent

In this unpretentious account of Britain's wartime gardeners, Ursula Buchan gently celebrates the dogged determination of characters such as... middle-class ladies who taught the rudiments of gardening in draughty village halls; park superintendents and professional gardeners employed by country house estates, who transformed rose gardens into fields of maize and herbaceous borders into cabbage patches; ...horticulturalists who improved compost and researched the most productive vegetable strains; hard-pressed nurserymen who gave up selling more profitable ornamental plants for vegetables; and professional gardeners, who watched the young men they had trained go off to war.

—— The Times Literary Supplement
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