Carrots Love Tomatoes: Secrets of Companion Planting for Successful GardeningPlant parsley and asparagus together and you’ll have more of each, but keep broccoli and tomato plants far apart if you want them to thrive. Utilize the natural properties of plants to nourish the soil, repel pests, and secure a greater harvest. With plenty of insightful advice and suggestions for planting schemes, Louise Riotte will inspire you to turn your garden into a naturally nurturing ecosystem. |
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Page 7
... Lettuce and most members of the Cabbage family are “friendly” to them. Broccoli (Brassica oleraceae) Like all members of the Cabbage family, broccoli does well with such aromatic plants as dill, celery, camomile, sage, peppermint, and ...
... Lettuce and most members of the Cabbage family are “friendly” to them. Broccoli (Brassica oleraceae) Like all members of the Cabbage family, broccoli does well with such aromatic plants as dill, celery, camomile, sage, peppermint, and ...
Page 19
... Lettuce (Lactuca sativa) In spring I keep a supply of small lettuce plants growing in cold frames. When I pull every other green onion for table use, I pop in lettuce plants. They will aid the onions, and the compost in the onion row ...
... Lettuce (Lactuca sativa) In spring I keep a supply of small lettuce plants growing in cold frames. When I pull every other green onion for table use, I pop in lettuce plants. They will aid the onions, and the compost in the onion row ...
Page 20
... lettuce, summer savory, and camomile (sparsely), but do not like peas and beans. Ornamental relations of the onion are useful as protective companions for roses. Since onion maggots travel from plant to plant when set in a row, scatter ...
... lettuce, summer savory, and camomile (sparsely), but do not like peas and beans. Ornamental relations of the onion are useful as protective companions for roses. Since onion maggots travel from plant to plant when set in a row, scatter ...
Page 36
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Contents
1 | |
5 | |
Herbs | 28 |
Wild Plants | 49 |
Grasses Grains and Field Crops | 81 |
First Steps for Home Fruit Growing | 93 |
Nuts | 105 |
Ornamental Trees and Shrubs | 109 |
Soil Improvement | 133 |
Pest Control | 145 |
Poisonous Plants | 169 |
Garden Plans | 180 |
Sources | 207 |
Suggested Reading | 208 |
Index | 209 |
Garden Techniques | 121 |
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Common terms and phrases
acid alfalfa aphids apple asparagus attractive bark basil beets berries broccoli bugs bulbs bush beans cabbage camomile carrots castor beans cauliflower celery chapter chile chives clover companion planting compost compost pile contain corn crop cucumbers delicious disease dried eaten Eelgrass effect eggplant fertilizer flavor flowers fruit trees fungi garden garlic grain grapes grass green manure ground grow grown growth herbs horsetail hyssop insects Japanese beetles juice kohlrabi leaves leeks legumes lettuce marigolds medicinal moths mulch mustard nematodes nitrogen okra onions orchard parsley particularly pastures peach peas pepper pests poisonous pole beans pollination potatoes protect pumpkin radishes repel roots roses rows salads Sassafras savory seeds shade shrubs soil sometimes called sorghum southernwood spinach spores spray squash stems stinging nettle strawberries summer savory sweet thyme tomatoes turnips varieties vegetables vine vitamin walnut weeds wheat wild wine winter