Product Details
Secrets of Companion Planting: Plants That Help, Plants That Hurt

Secrets of Companion Planting: Plants That Help, Plants That Hurt
By Brenda Little

List Price: $14.95
Price: $10.17 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details

Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com

33 new or used available from $8.69

Average customer review:

Product Description

Transform a messy, tangled garden into a lush, productive retreat with this simple yet thorough handbook. The basics of companion gardening can be easily integrated into one’s gardening style using the nurturing power of Mother Nature and taking fundamental principles into account. Not merely a seasonal occupation or hobby, companion planting is a natural way to restore balance to outdoor spaces. By planting certain plants in close proximity, each helps the others. Easily implemented techniques such as increasing the essential oils and nutrients in plants, conditioning the soil, and attracting helpful insects are discussed, as well as ways to reduce pests and diseases without the use of toxic pesticides.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #78812 in Books
  • Published on: 2008-05-01
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 144 pages

Features


Editorial Reviews

About the Author

Brenda Little is an avid gardener and the author of numerous books, including Backyard Organic Gardening, Companion Planting in Australia, The Complete Book of Herbs and SpicesThe Encyclopedia of Vegetable Gardening, The Green Gardener, and The Illustrated Herbal Encyclopedia.


Customer Reviews

A plethera of usefyll information5
I onwn this book, (120 pages long) As well as Carrots LOve tomatoes by Louise Riotte (207 pages long), Each book contains helpfull hints, & information that isn't in the other ones. For example if one says to plant Beans, & carrots togather, Chanches are pretty good that it you peruse the other book it will not only tell you the same thing but why to do it. Very usefull information for someone like me. I like to know why I am being told to do something, & not just be doing it because a book said it is good to do so. Brendas book has some interesting claims that are not in Louises's book, however If I could only affors to purchases one of the books I would buy CARROTS LOVE TOMATOES by LOUUISE RIOTTE, as if you pay reccomended publisher price found on the back covers, Riotte's book is $00.45 U.S.D. Cheaper, & is a lot bigger book.

Great Little Book5
I also purchased Secrets of Companion Planting at the same time as Carrots Love Tomatoes. Purchased through ebates dot com to get a 4% rebate then though overstock dot com. This is a small book but what is GREAT about it is the back which has a list of good companions and bad companion foods to grow together. Go to let's say carrots and the book will show which foods NOT to grow next to carrots and and which foods to grow next to carrots. This one stop shopping list is worth the cost of this little book alone.

Seriously buy Carrots Love Tomatoes with Secrets of Companion Planting as they compliment each other.

Bad Companion, Carrots And Tomatoes (?)2
The book offers a "good companion" list and a "bad companion" list. Good companions are those plants that grow well together. Bad companions are plants that a gardener would not want to plant together. Simple enough to understand, yeah? Yeah, well, hummm... I'm not kidding with what I am about to write here... Reader, you may have noticed that there is another book titled Carrots Love Tomatoes. Okay so, the first thing I did in the book Secrets of Companion Planting was to look up carrots and tomatoes on the good and bad companion lists. Here's what I found...

Good Companion
Carrots---Tomatoes not listed, page 104.
Tomatoes---Carrots listed, page 107.

Bad Companion
Carrots---Tomatoes Listed (!) page 108.
Tomatoes---Carrots not listed, page 109.

It makes no sense to me how tomatoes and carrots could be listed as good companions and bad companions.

Now, I have to explain why I gave the book two stars instead of one... The author said as a "by the way" that potatoes should be planted in the same place because they come up twice as thick the summer after their first harvest. I have no idea what the author is talking about with the potato sentence, but it was enough to make me want to do research about it. I thought that once the potatoes were dug up, i.e. harvested, the plant was no more. Maybe some potatoes get left in the ground and that's why they come up twice as thick the summer after the first harvest? Maybe potatoes leave some nutrient in the soil that causes the second round of planting to be better than the first? I don't know. I am going to research it though. I'm curious.

I have the book Carrots Love Tomatoes next to me, but I haven't read it yet. I hurried up to write this review to potentially save someone from buying the book Secrets of Companion Planting.

Sometimes I wonder if the authors are knowledgeable, but the editor made some mistakes?