I have written previously about Carol Deppe‘s books – The Resilient Gardener and Breed Your Own Vegetable Varieties. She has a new seed list of varieties she has developed on her own. She is located in the Pacific Northwest, so I suspect that her seeds would probably not be the best choice for those of us down here in Dixie; however, you really need to read the seed descriptions so you can learn her thought process for selecting and developing the varieties in her garden. It also demonstrates the focus she has on matching local conditions to the varieties you select. Let me take this opportunity to again highly recommend both of her books. They should be in the library of anyone interested in growing and developing their own food.
Tag: Carol Deppe
Carol Deppe is, without a doubt, one of my favorite authors of gardening books. We’ll talk more about her books in a future post, but I wanted to pass along the 33 main points from Chapter two of her book, The Resilient Gardener:
- All Gardening is Local
- Plant Things That Grow Where You Live
- Variety, Variety, Variety
- Plant Varieties That Grow Where You Live
- Buy High Quality Seeds or Plants
- Plants Need Sun
- Plants Need Warmth
- Some Plants Need Cold
- Plants Need Soil
- Plants Need Nutrients
- You Must Prepare the Ground for Your Plants
- You Can Plant in Beds or Rows; You can Plant Intensively or Less So
- Plant at the Right Time
- Plant Seeds at the Right Depth
- Plants Need Water
- Plants Need Room to Grow
- You Must Weed
- Resist the Temptation to Do Unnecessary Things
- You Must Thin
- Plants Need Protection from Insects, Pests, and Herbivores
- Plants Need Protection from Disease
- Plants Sometimes Need Protection from Weather
- You Can Use Transplants or Seeds
- Some Plants Need Support
- Some Plants Need Pruning
- Learn to Harvest and Store Product Optimally
- Experiment
- Keep at Least Some Records
- Think Small
- Everything Is Connected
- Slow Down
- Notice Everything
- Save, Cherish, and Distribute Seeds of the Varieties You Care about the Most
Each of these items is, of course, accompanied by a detailed description of what it really means. Some of these items may look rather obvious or redundant or just plain strange, but rest assured that they are all very relevant not only to gardening in general, but to Southern Agrarianism in particular. She (as far as I know) never mentions Southern anything (she lives in the Pacific Northwest), but the spirit of Southern Agrarianism is very much a part of what she writes.
I strongly encourage you to buy the book and add it to your library. I have quite a collection of gardening books in my library, but I consider the Deppe books to be the best all-around source of information that goes deeply into the how and the why of gardening rather than a simple “do this” set of instructions. Her other book, Breed Your Own Vegetable Varieties, is another excellent book by Carol Deppe, and we’ll go into that in another future post.
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