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Eyewitness Garden Handbooks: Roses (Eyewitness Garden Handbooks)
 
 
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Eyewitness Garden Handbooks: Roses (Eyewitness Garden Handbooks) [Paperback]

David Joyce (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)


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Book Description

Eyewitness Garden Handbooks April 1, 1996
A lavishly illustrated, user--friendly handbook of roses. Packed with more than 350 photographs of over 300 plants, Roses is an inspiring handbook to help you identify, choose, and grow your favorite varieties. Discover at a glance the full range of roses available. Each entry combines a plant portrait with a concise botanical description, plus cultivation and propagation details. Helpful symbols indicate preferred growing conditions and cold hardiness. If you want a specific leaf or flower color in a particular season, The Plant Guide will offer you the perfect specimen. All the essential considerations such as selecting a rose, preparing the ground, watering, mulching, feeding, weeding, pest control, and transplanting are clearly explained. Pruning details are included for every type of rose. Details on propagation, including grafting techniques, are also given. Whether you are planting a new garden or seeking new features of interest for an established one, Roses is your indispensable, portable gardening companion. A lavishly illustrated flexibound, Eyewitness Garden Handbooks are the user--friendly guides that identify every type of garden plant with up to ten salient features, at--a--glance information on height, spread, and color, and useful cultivation symbols. There are also separate sections on gardening skills and a complete index of common names.


Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

Full of solid, practical advice and plenty of how-to pictures, Roses is an ideal title for those wanting all their questions answered about these lovely, surprisingly versatile flowers. Focusing on possible combinations with different varieties, training possibilities, containers, and growing conditions, you may be tempted to turn your lawn into an award-winning rose garden. With so much detail on one particular type of plant, you'll find plenty of direction for growing healthy blooms, no matter what your specific needs may be.

Designed to be a complete do-it-yourself guide, don't let the small format of this book fool you--it's absolutely jam-packed with ideas for all styles of gardens, and as always, publisher Dorling Kindersley manages to take fairly complicated projects and reduce them to a manageable size that even the gardening novice can handle. Practical considerations are dealt with firmly--choosing healthy plants is an essential beginning, and without intelligent pruning, your roses will never achieve perfection. The listings by size, bloom shape, color, and optimal conditions are very specific, and new gardeners will find all kinds of useful tips.

Inspirational ideas are plentiful--the garden photographs are lush and detailed and provide all kind of unusual notions for creating a truly unique gardening space. Whether you're looking to design a simple bloom-filled trellis or a garden filled with fragrant hybrid teas, you'll find options for all your projects involving these lovely and versatile plants. --Jill Lightner --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Library Journal

These two volumes pack a great deal of information into a small space, with the distinctive design and high-quality illustrations that are DK's hallmark. Perennials is a small, attractive reference guide "to selecting and identifying perennials." The plants are grouped first by size, then by season of interest, and then by color. Major garden plants like peonies and chrysanthemums are grouped together in boxed spreads. There are brief descriptions of the plants, their preferred habitat, and their cultivation, with U.S. Department of Agriculture hardiness zone information. Despite this effort to accommodate American gardeners, many of the named varieties listed seem to be of British origin and are not common in the American trade. However, this book would make a nice supplement to a more authoritative work like Ellen Phillips and C. Colston Burrell's Rodale's Illustrated Encyclopedia of Perennials (LJ 12/95). Roses describes over 300 varieties, arranged by type (Modern Bush, Old Garden and Species, Miniature, etc.) and then color. Following is a brief guide to rose care. Although it describes more varieties than Judith McKeon's Encyclopedia of Roses (LJ 9/1/95), the latter provides more information on each variety and is far stronger on rose garden design, care, and disease control. Recommended as a supplement to more comprehensive works.?Molly Newling, Piscataway P.L., N.J.
Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 160 pages
  • Publisher: DK ADULT (April 1, 1996)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0789406071
  • ISBN-13: 978-0789406071
  • Product Dimensions: 8.3 x 5.3 x 0.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 10.4 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #398,988 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Linden Hawthorne's latest book, Gardenening with Shape, Line and Texture, was shortlisted by The Garden Media Guild for Reference Book of the Year in December 2010. I returned to the more bucolic life as the working head gardener of an estate on a spur of the Wolds in North Yorkshire, UK, some ten years ago, working hand-in-glove with the owner - also a passionate gardener. I manage orchards, a large kitchen garden, bog gardens, meadows and woodland gardens, as well as a private arboretum (tree collection) of some 2,500 specimens. I formerly enjoyed a long career in horticultural publishing, working on a wide variety of reference publications over twenty years. Some of the high spots included being the contributing editor for cultivation on The New RHS Dictionary of Gardening, (Macmillan 1992), and for the RHS A-Z Encyclopedia Of Garden Plants (Dorling Kindersley 1995). For five years, I enjoyed being a monthly contributor to the Royal Horticultural Society Journal, The Garden, as the author of Last Words. For a time, I acted as the Education Officer for the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew & Castle Howard Arboretum Trust (CHAT) from 1997 to 2002, and as sole guide-lecturer for the previous nine years for Dr James Russell's outstanding plant collections at Castle Howard in Yorkshire, where I made friends with visiting fellow gardeners from all over the world.(If you haven't seen the collections at Castle Howard, you will be astounded when you do). Although I am indisputably an English gardener, I have also travelled widely in the US, most recently to see the Big Trees in California.
Gardens and most particularly plants; designing with them, painting them, growing them, eating them,seeing them in their habitat and making the connection between their needs in the wild and how to imitate that in gardens are perennial sources of joy for me. Sharing those experiences with other gardeners is too. My new book was written with them in mind. The only thing I hate about gardening? Probably one-upmanship. Your garden, your space, your taste, are your own joys. Let them be your own expression of beauty and they're a joy forever.

 

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Better than all the other books on roses I've owned., March 13, 2001
By A Customer
I absolutely loved all of the gorgeous pictures! The photos also made pruning and planting instructions easy to understand. I have many other rose manuals, but this one has better care information than my other much longer books.
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9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars American Horticultural Society Practical Guides: Roses, February 9, 2002
By 
"willel0" (Eagan, MN USA) - See all my reviews
Very basic information with photos. OK for a novice, too vague if you have ever grown roses. The book seems aimed at novices in in a zone 6 or 7 growing climate.
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