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McGee & Stuckey's Bountiful Container: Create Container Gardens of Vegetables, Herbs, Fruits, and Edible Flowers PDF

572 Pages·2002·7.08 MB·English
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Preview McGee & Stuckey's Bountiful Container: Create Container Gardens of Vegetables, Herbs, Fruits, and Edible Flowers

McGEE & STUCKEY’S The BOUNTIFUL CONTAINER A Container Garden of Vegetables, Herbs, Fruits, and Edible Flowers ________________ ROSE MARIE NICHOLS McGEE and MAGGIE STUCKEY Illustrations by Michael A. Hill WORKMAN PUBLISHING • NEW YORK “Time spent working in your garden will not be deducted from your life.” —M. S. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS In one sense, every gardener who came before us played a role in this book, for the knowledge passed down through time from person to person is the core of every garden book ever written. We acknowledge, with respect, our debt to them all. Three specific individuals are owed profound thanks for their help in this project. Jim Gilbert, owner of both Northwoods Nursery (wholesale) and One Green World (retail mail order), is a mine of knowledge about fruit trees; it is our good fortune that he is also generous in sharing what he knows. Two experienced gardeners and garden writers—Teri Dunn, who lives near Boston, and Carolyn Clark, of Portland, Oregon—pitched in with valuable and much- appreciated assistance. Thanks to all for your good information and good cheer. Thanks, too, to the creative cooks who kindly shared their recipes: Walter Chandoha, Rosalind Creasy, Thomas DeBaggio, Peter Kopcinski, Jan Roberts- Dominguez, Bruce Naftaly, Carole Saville, and Renée Shepherd. And to Barbara Blossom Ashmun of Portland, Oregon, author and garden designer, for her rosy suggestions. CONTENTS PREFACE INTRODUCTION: FROM OUR GARDENS TO YOURS PART ONE: YOU AND YOUR GARDEN CHAPTER 1 MANAGING YOUR SPACE CHAPTER 2 PLANNING FOR GOOD TASTE CHAPTER 3 MAKING YOUR GARDEN BEAUTIFUL PART TWO: DOWN-TO-EARTH BASICS CHAPTER 4 HARDWARE: CONTAINERS, TRELLISES, TOOLS, AND STORAGE CHAPTER 5 SOFTWARE: SOIL, SEEDS, AND PLANTS CHAPTER 6 KEEPING A HEALTHY GARDEN PART THREE: PLANTS FOR THE BOUNTIFUL CONTAINER CHAPTER 7 VEGETABLES BEANS BEETS CARROTS CUCUMBERS EGGPLANT LEAFY GREENS LETTUCE AND OTHER SALAD GREENS ONION FAMILY: SCALLIONS, LEEKS, AND GREEN GARLIC PEAS PEPPERS POTATOES RADISHES SPINACH AND SPINACH SUBSTITUTES SQUASH TOMATOES CHAPTER 8 HERBS BASIL BAY BORAGE CHAMOMILE CHERVIL CHIVES CILANTRO DILL FENNEL FEVERFEW LAVENDER LEMONGRASS LEMON VERBENA MARJORAM MINT MONARDA OREGANO PARSLEY ROSEMARY SAFFRON CROCUS SAGE SALAD BURNET SCENTED GERANIUMS STEVIA SWEET WOODRUFF TARRAGON THYME CHAPTER 9 FRUITS APPLES BLUEBERRIES CITRUS CURRANTS AND GOOSEBERRIES FIGS GRAPES PEACHES AND NECTARINES STRAWBERRIES CHAPTER 10 EDIBLE FLOWERS BEGONIAS CALENDULAS CHRYSANTHEMUMS DAYLILIES DIANTHUS MARIGOLDS NASTURTIUMS PANSIES, VIOLAS, AND VIOLETS ROSES SUNFLOWERS TULIPS APPENDIX U.S.D.A. HARDINESS ZONE MAP MAIL-ORDER SOURCES INDEX PREFACE Several years ago my mother, Edith Nichols, attended a family wedding in Greece. She returned home with many happy stories and descriptions of fruiting gardens and fresh-picked figs served right from the tree. In particular, she could hardly stop talking about her sister-in-law’s balcony garden. In the heart of downtown Athens, my Aunt Athena was growing three vigorous tomato plants, a few cucumbers, a small lemon tree, and several herbs—all in containers. Whenever the mood struck, she could simply step out onto the balcony and harvest the makings of a Greek salad, absolutely fresh. What so amazed my mother was the productivity: “That little space was feeding all those people!” Inspired by Aunt Athena’s success, and mindful of the pleasure my mother derived from it, the next summer we helped her plan a deck garden of her own. She was a lifelong gardener, but arthritis had increasingly curtailed her activity level. As a family project, we built a small garden on her deck, using containers raised to a height that she could manage. Here she grew vegetables, herbs, and colorful flowers, and even when the famous Oregon weather kept her inside, she enjoyed the sight of her plants through the windows. At my own home, I also have a deck garden set within a larger garden. On and around the deck, I have containers of alpine strawberries, small-fruited tomatoes, spicy peppers, and herbs. I cannot begin to count the meals our family has enjoyed on that deck over the years, in the shelter of several large evergreens, but I do remember the many times that we snapped off sprigs of fresh herbs to add to the chickens on the grill or plucked a few more tomatoes for the salad. We also are fortunate to have an oversize yard, with plenty of space for all kinds of gardening. We grow vegetables in several beds out back, and somehow that always seemed to be the “serious” gardening. The plants on the deck, while equally productive and healthy, seemed a more playful and personal expression of the pleasures of gardening. Then I met Maggie, a great gardener who was planting her new vegetable garden in containers. She was determined to incorporate the best plant varieties and gardening techniques in this endeavor. We had much to discuss. —ROSE MARIE NICHOLS McGEE Corvallis, Oregon POSTSCRIPT: In the spring of 1999, as we were beginning the serious work on this book, my mother passed away, I wish that I could feel philosophical about it, saying something profound about the cycle of life in all of nature, but the fact is that I still miss her terribly. The small deck garden we built for her still stands, and I will tend the plants as long as I can, until 1 pass it and her house into the care of a new owner. —RMNM About two years ago, for reasons that made sense at the time, I moved from a house I had lived in for twenty-some years, with a garden I had nurtured and loved for almost as long, into a condominium whose only garden space is a concrete patio about the size of a picnic table. In my old garden I had spent most of my time with herbs and vegetables, and in my new home I wasn’t about to give that up, at least not without a fight. If I couldn’t have my “in-the-ground” garden, I decided, I could do it all with containers. My first instinct when starting a new venture is to head to the library, and there I encountered my first difficulty: most books about container gardening deal with flowers. Vegetables, if they are addressed at all, are accorded a skimpy page or two, usually given over to tomatoes. I was not deterred. I felt deep in my bones that much more was possible, that indeed a full kitchen garden could be created with containers, if only we gardeners could break free from this limited, tomato-based thinking. At first, my results were underwhelming. I endured some old problems (the slugs that are the bane of northwest gardeners managed to find their way from my old garden to the new place) and made my share of new mistakes. Then, in a wonderful piece of serendipity, I happened to cross paths with Rose Marie Nichols McGee. Rose Marie is president of Nichols Garden Nursery, one of America’s best specialty seed companies, a business founded by her parents more than 50 years ago. She is extraordinarily knowledgeable about vegetables and herbs, and passionate about teaching the world to grow them. The day she agreed to collaborate with me, two nice things happened: (1) my little patio garden moved from a stubborn experiment to a reality, and (2) this book was born. —MAGGIE STUCKEY Portland, Oregon INTRODUCTION FROM OUR GARDENS TO YOURS Imagine stepping outside in the early evening and filling a basket with the ingredients of tonight’s salad: bronze-leaf and dark green Simpson lettuce, arugula, and scallions, along with a few chives to garnish the soup. Picture an early-summer Sunday picnic in the park. You’ll bring your famous potato salad, made from tiny new red potatoes and sugar snap peas and garnished with blaze-orange nasturtiums, and a big jug of lemonade intensely flavored with lemon balm and spearmint—all from your garden. Fast-forward in your mind’s eye to late summer, and the gazpacho you will make from your homegrown vegetables: tomatoes so perfectly ripe they practically hum, crunchy bell peppers, and sweet-crisp lemon cucumbers. Wait just a minute, you may be thinking. That’s all well and good for you country types, but I live in an apartment building. I’d love to have fresh vegetables and herbs right at my fingertips, but all I have is a balcony so small I can hardly turn around on it. Do not despair. Even if your only “garden” space is tiny, we’re betting you have room for at least one large container. And with that one container and a little planning, you can do amazing things. This is a book about growing good things to eat—vegetables, herbs, fruits, and edible flowers—in containers. It may come as something of a new idea that you can grow food on your balcony or patio, but stop and think for a moment: if you can grow pansies in a pot, you can grow peas in a pot. Both need about the same conditions, but one will give you dinner. We wrote this book for everyone who aspires to have garden-fresh foodstuffs but has no yard in which to grow them. If you live in an apartment, town house, or condominium, or on a houseboat, you may be a container gardener out of necessity. But we think this book will also be useful for those whose traditional garden area is not well suited to growing vegetables. We imagine, too, that even those with an existing vegetable garden might find it

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Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.