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Hardcover Gardening for a Lifetime: How to Garden Wiser as You Grow Older Book

ISBN: 1604690658

ISBN13: 9781604690651

Gardening for a Lifetime: How to Garden Wiser as You Grow Older

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

Although the garden may beckon as strongly as ever, the tasks involved -- pulling weeds, pushing wheelbarrows, digging holes, moving heavy pots -- become increasingly difficult, or even impossible, with advancing age. But the idea of giving it up is unthinkable for most gardeners. So what's the alternative? In Gardening for a Lifetime , Sydney Eddison draws on her own forty years of gardening to provide a practical and encouraging roadmap for scaling...

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Very good, but something missing

Though I haven't yet finished the book (too busy gardening!), I am enjoying it. What I find missing is a diagram of her garden! There are numerous sketches of plants, but none of the garden areas that she constantly refers to. It would have made it much easier to understand what she has done, if the illustrator had added perhaps before and after sketches of the basic garden layout.

Another good read from an exceptional gardener-writer

I've read all of Sydney's books and recommend them highly to anyone who loves to garden and appreciates what a hands-on expert with a wonderfully engaging writing style is happy to share. Sydney's books are about gardening and life, and this book deals with some of the realities we aging gardeners face. I was lucky enough to visit her garden a decade ago and remember the perfection of her amazing perennial bed and the charm of her primrose path. When I blanched at the inadequacy of my gardening efforts in comparison to her paradise, she smiled, and remarked that "this is not a garden, this is my life's work." As Sydney has aged, her garden and her perspective have evolved. But what hasn't changed is her wonderfully warm and very practical account of her life in her garden.

downsizing in the garden

Enjoyable read about downsizing a long-established garden.I However I could not relate too much as I do not have acres and acres to garden. Still recommend especially for older gardens.

Just What An Old Gardener Needs

I read this delightful book in one sitting. Ms. Ellison worries about how both her forty-year old garden and herself will survive old age. She doesn't want to give it up entirely, so she looks for friends, experts, and resources to decide the best ways to keep the garden and do less work. It is perfect approach for gardeners like me, approaching 70, to find a way to keep gardening "forever."

Great Ideas For Those Who Are Overwhelmed With Gardening Duties

This is such an honest little handbook for the overwhelmed gardener. We don't always have the time, good health, or energy for gardening responsibilities, but we keep bringing in more of everything and with each comes more tasks. I've been wondering for quite some time if I've bitten off more than I can chew in my current garden. The author has gone through the same process and helps us make our gardens appropriate for our current (and future) needs. When do we have enough trees, shrubs, and plants? How do we know if we have too much and what do we do about it? This book addresses in general and very specific ways to control what goes in, or stays in, our gardens, so we can continue to enjoy them without being overwhelmed. After reading this book, a weight lifted off my shoulders, because she recommends that for certain tasks we get help, as much help as we can afford. Whew! I had felt so guilty not to be able to do it all. After all, it's my garden! The best part of it is, she talks about her various helpers over the years and their different approaches and what she has learned from each of them. I love this quote about one of her helpers, "she knew how to hit the high spots and keep us up to speed." The author is a garden perfectionist, which isn't always the best strategy for gardening. One very simple example is how she has learned to use lists, a practical idea for me. "When you feel overwhelmed by all the things that cry out to be done in the garden, making a list can be useful." Actually, she has several lists, including a daily list, which she tells us to keep short because we have too many other obligations already, and a master list, which we can chomp off items on as we have time, rather than stand around in the garden wondering what we could get done in the 30 minutes we have available today. Great idea. Her solutions are practical, and that's what I need in my life. The fact that the author is a perfectionist began to work against her over time. She kept expanding her garden, but expected to be able to keep it at the same standards she had when it was smaller. That didn't work for her, so she learned how to bring her garden dreams into line with the "realities" of her life. She eventually came to the conclusion that something had to go. That's the meat of this book, the process she goes through to decide what, when, and how to start simplifying. For example, she says, "The greater the variety of perennials you grow, the more work your border will entail...each one demands something---staking, deadheading, cutting back, or division, either to ensure good flower production or to restrain its spread." She also teaches us that if we have one genus or species monopolizing our time and dominating our garden, we need to think about reducing its number. Then she gives the standards a perennial must meet in order for it to remain, or be added to, her garden as it fits her life right now. She gives specifics, which is very helpful! One
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