Dwarf Campanulas: And Associated Genera
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Average customer review:Product Description
Campanulas have long been among gardeners' favorite plants—here, their lesser-known relatives, the diminutive yet exuberant dwarf campanulas, take center stage. Graham Nicholls describes more than 200 campanulas and more than 100 related plants, discussing their natural habitats and offering cultivation and propagation advice.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #1133269 in Books
- Published on: 2006-10-01
- Format: Illustrated
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Hardcover
- 272 pages
Editorial Reviews
From the Publisher
Graham Nicholls describes more than 200 dwarf campanulas and more than 100 related plants, discussing their natural habitats and offering cultivation and propagation advice.
About the Author
Respected British nurseryman Graham Nicholls, who draws upon nearly half a century’s experience in growing alpine plants, has enjoyed particular recognition for his cultivation of award-winning dwarf campanulas. He has won several gold medals at Alpine Garden Society (AGS) shows and is a three-time recipient of the prestigious Farrer Medal. Now a national judge for the AGS, he lectures regularly in the United Kingdom and the United States. He has contributed to the journals of the AGS, The Alpine Gardener, and the North American Rock Garden Society, Rock Garden Quarterly, and in 2002 he published Alpine Plants of North America: An Encyclopedia of Mountain Flowers from the Rockies to Alaska (Timber Press).
Customer Reviews
Not perfect, but the best
For those wondering which book(s) to buy to learn about Campanulas, there are essentially three choices: Lewis & Lynch, Crook, and Nicholls. If your interest is garden Camps, the English cottage kind, L & L is the one for you. It has full-page color photos, cultivation and propagation info, and details cultivars of popular species.
But the majority of Camps are small alpine plants, and I divide the rock gardeners interested in them into three categories: casual, serious, and fanatic (let's say "enthusiast", instead), the category in which I include myself.
For the casual Camper, I recommend Nicholls. Lots of color photos, lots of species, lots of info, up to date. Not perfect. He describes a species as coming from limestone crevices and growing well in tufa, and in cultivation "requires a gritty lime-free soil". Maybe,seems unlikely. Many instances of species A described as being related to sp. B, sp. B's text says it's related to C, with no mention of A, sp. C says it's related to A "and others" plural, with no mention of B and one wonders what the "others" are. Many instances of species descriptions omitting pH preference or other details of cultivation requirements. However,the text is conversational, not technically laid out, so it's understandable that not all details would be included in each description. And I've reread the book many times and used it for cross-referencing, so I'd notice these things where others might not. But if you're trying to get species' relationships straight in your head, or, on a practical level, if the pH preference isn't specified for a species you have and you'd like to look up related species to see what _they_ like, it can be frustrating. But the casual Camper won't notice, or care.
For the serious Camper, I recommend Nicholls and Crook. Crook is almost 60 years old, the photos are b&w (and in later reprints fuzzy), at least half of the text is either obsolete or pointless (he'll take three paragraphs to describe a plant only to then tell you it's impossible to grow or a ineradicable weed). But he's valuable for cross-referencing, and, well, it's CROOK for cripes sake, he's a classic! He suffers from faulty logic at times, but there's still a wealth of knowledge in there.
For the, er, enthusiast, you might want all three. I mean, you can get both the Crook and the L&L for about $10 each! There's always a case where the other two let you down and the 3rd will have that little tidbit of factoid you needed to plan your perfect trough! Crook is the only one to mention that C.elatines is alone in all the garganica group in avoiding lime. Good to know!



