Gardening books page
Some suggested reading for you......
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by Theodore James and Harry Haralambou
This new, updated edition shows
astonishingly beautiful spaces in a range of shoreline
settings, including ocean dunes, rocky coasts, and wetlands. In
addition to including 65 new photographs, this edition
features a completely revamped and expanded Plant
Encyclopaedic, with a new section on tropical plants and
tender perennials. The book's lush photographs of seaside
oases offer gardeners ideas for using colour, fashioning
landscapes, creating patio and deck garden; and
constructing ponds, paths and trellises. And a Practical
Guide, comprising up-to-date information about sandy soil,
salt water, deer, and other seaside predicaments, makes
this a complete resource for anyone who gardens in this
demanding environment.
by Julian Slatcher
This book explains the techniques and introduces the plants
that will help you to make the most of your coastal garden. The
author takes you through the processes of designing, building
and maintaining a garden by the sea.
S
ubjects included in the book :The Living
Windbreak, Use of Colour in the Garden, Laying Patios and
Paths, Positioning of Plants, a Garden Calendar and advice
on over 150 plants that thrive in Coastal Gardens.
by Richard Mortimer

A comprehensive guide for those who have to contend with
wind and drought on sandy soil. It contains invaluable advice
for the beginner as well as providing more than 750 plant
descriptions which is excellent source material for the
experienced coastal gardener, as well as for the Garden
Planner.
by
Barbara Segall (Author),
Jerry Harpur (Photographer) "The garden at Lamorran House
in southwest Cornwall overlooks the sheltered Fal estuary
..."
This book highlights 21 of the world's most
inspiring coastal gardens - among them a clifftop garden
in Devon, a garden in California that appears to dissolve
into the sea; blazes of colour on the shores of New
Zealand, islands off the coast of Massachusetts and
elegant terraces with stunning views over the
Meditteranean sea.
The author profiles 150 plants that thrive in coastal
gardens and explains the techniques for dealing with drought,
sun, wind and salt, shingle and sandy soil, and much more.
 Derek Jarman created his own garden in
the flat, bleak expanse of shingle that faces the
nuclear power station in Dungeness, Kent. A passionate
gardener from childhood, he combined his painter's
eye, his horticultural expertise and his ecological
convictions to produce a landscape which mixed the
flint, shells and driftwood of Dungeness; sculptures
made from stones; the area's indigenous plants; and
shrubs and flowers introduced by Jarman himself. This
book, the last he ever wrote, is his own record of how
this garden evolved, from its beginnings in 1985 to
the day of his death in 1994.
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