Garden Bulbs for the South
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Average customer review:Product Description
There are hundreds of choice bulbs that revel in southern warmth and humidity, and Scott Ogden profiles the best of them in this fascinating, comprehensive volume. In a series of chapters that takes us through the gardening year, Ogden introduces the plants that help to give southern gardens their distinct regional flavor, many with charmingly descriptive names: rain lilies, oxblood lilies, jonquils, crinums, and scores of others. Weaving in bits of history and lore, Ogden details each plant's appearance and growing requirements. Originally published to widespread acclaim in 1994, Garden Bulbs for the South has been updated and significantly expanded in this edition to include information on new varieties as well as nearly one hundred new photographs.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #282428 in Books
- Published on: 2007-02-01
- Format: Illustrated
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Hardcover
- 396 pages
Features
- ISBN13: 9780881928136
- Condition: NEW
- Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.
Editorial Reviews
From Booklist
Ogden's book concerns what he calls "the historic, neglected, and little-known" warm-climate bulbs that grow well in the South. There are 133 genera listed in the appendix, with notes on their species, origins, and culture. Ogden opens with a chapter on rain lilies and continues with chapters on bulbs that bloom in the fall (Guernsey and oxblood lilies, lycoris, cyclamens, alliums, etc.), on winter blooms (paper-whites, Roman hyacinths, blue starflowers, etc.), on jonquils and daffodils, on bulbs that bloom in the spring (trout lilies, tulips, grape hyacinths, etc.), on irises, gladiolus, and shellflowers, on crinums and spider lilies, on so-called summer glories, and on cannas, arums, and gingers. The book is a treasure, packed with information and 200 color photographs. George Cohen
Review
Written in the style of the late, great Southern garden writer Elizabeth Lawrence, this updated second edition is a must for all Texas bulb enthusiasts. There is none better. -- Greg Grant Dallas Morning News 20070216 An essential gardening book - but not only for the South. Ogden presents a broad palette for those gardening in favored locales on the Pacific Coast as well as for those following the current trend of growing tropical bedding plants in much colder climes. And where many authors merely repeat what has already been written, Ogden's closely observed peculiarities of his subjects make it outstanding horticultural literature. -- Jerry Flintoff American Gardener 20070301 A must-have reference for warm climate gardeners who want to enjoy the annual phenomenon of bulbs. -- John Bagnasco Garden Compass 20070701 A treasure-trove of barely known possibilities. ... Its profusion of lush photos, featuring gorgeous settings, will please both the dedicated bulb gardener and the armchair bulb dreamer. -- Bill Scheick Dallas Morning News 20070810 An Austin, Texas-based horticulturist/landscape designer/garden writer not only reassures Southerners that they can grow bulbs associated with colder climates, but also points out that warm-weather bulbs are part of a regional garden legacy. SciTech Book News 20071201 I must confess, I already have the first edition of this book. It's one of my favorites, full of information on which bulbs can take our steamy summers and return every year bigger and better. So when I found out the second edition has been expanded to include information on new varieties and about 100 new photographs, it moved to the top of my wish list again. Shreveport Times 20071222 Part field guide, part garden staging and design, Austin horticulturist Scott Ogden has updated his classic handbook of garden bulbs into a new, gorgeous, photo-filled, second edition. -- Mary Tutwiler Lafayette Independent Weekly 20080213 Ogden's extensive background as a horticulturist and garden designer, his engaging readable style of writing, and beautiful color photographs all combine to make Garden Bulbs for the South a must-read for bulb lovers. -- Karen Preuss Northwest Garden News 20080201 An easy and delightful read [that] introduces the reader to many different geophytes ... excel[s] at introducing the reader to many different geophytes and offering suggestions for how they may be successfully used in the southern landscape. -- Mark J. Schusler Bulbs 20071001 Author Scott Ogden weaves a welcoming web of personal observations, common sense, historical references, lore, and inspiration. -- Stephen Pategas Ornamental Outlook 20080601 This edition has new photographs and is much expanded over the first edition. ... I have both editions and would not be without either. -- Russell Studebaker Tulsa World 20081206
Review
"An essential gardening book—but not only for the South...And where many authors merely repeat what has already been written, Ogden's closely observed pecularities of his subject make it outstanding horticultural literature." Jerry Flintoff, American Gardener
"Written in the style of the late, great Southern garden writer Elizabeth Lawrence, this updated second edition is a must for all Texas bulb enthusiasts. There is none better." Greg Grant, Dallas Morning News
"This is a must-have reference for warm climate gardeners who want to enjoy the annual phenomenon of bulbs." John Bagnasco, Garden Compass July/August 2007
“Author Scott Ogden weaves a welcoming web of personal observations, common sense, historical references, lore, and inspiration.”
Ornamental OutlookCustomer Reviews
A good book overlooked, for overlooked plants
From Sarah B. Duke Gardens' Flora newsletter:
"Ogden is a plantsman familiar with all the bulbous (and cormous and tuberous) plants that can be grown out-of-doors in the South. He imparts his erudition lightly and with a flair uncommon in garden books today.
This book is worth buying for its 30-page chapter on Crinum and Spider lilies alone, a subject never treated properly in the usual books on bulbs because these beauties can't be grown in the North... The author also discusses myriad species of Gladiolus, Hippeastrum, Iris, Lycoris, Trillium, and Zephyranthes, as well as numerous genera with only a single cultivated representative, such as Ipheion. In addition, there are nearly 200 colored photographs, most of them smaller than a playing card, that vary from fair to excellent."
Very useful to a new gardener: in addition to telling me about bulbs I'd never heard of (and then immediately noticed in all the older gardens nearby), Ogden makes variety-specific recommendation about which daffodils (not King Alfred!), tulips (very few), muscari, etc., are going to thrive i.e. multiply rather than fade away. Some bulbs need colder winters than they will find in my part of Eastern NC. I've already saved the price of the book by not buying flowers that won't be happy in my yard!
A must for every Southern 'Bulb Lover!'
Garden Bulbs for the South is simply a great book. The vast majority of books on bulbs deal extensively with Tulips, Grape Hyacinths, Daffodils and other cold climate bulbs and only give cursory information about warm climate bulbs and the information often pertains to container gardening. Every northerner moving South is tempted to try growing cold climate bulbs. Reading this book is both a delight and a time and money saver. It will also assist you in trying a lot of bulbs that you might otherwise overlook. It has been one of the most read books in my gardening library.
Yes Virginia, There Are Bulbs We Can Grow In The South
My copy of Mr. Ogden's book is already dog-eared from use. Any gardener in the South who is interested in adding perennial bulbs to the garden must read this book. The information on every type of bulb, tuber or corm, including those of wild Southern heritage, is generous, well written and easy to understand. Garden Bulbs for the South is useful not only as a gardening reference but as a field classification manual when trying to identify that lily blooming at the old farmhouse down the road. After reading the chapter on rain lilies, I was finally able to determine what that tiny little lily growing wild in my front yard really is. Highly recommend.




