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Single best book that helped you with gardening?

 
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Very open ended question here. As someone who loves reading and is also pretty new to gardening I would love to hear your favorites that helped you.
 
pollinator
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2 resources stand out the most for us. They both have some practical info in them but we found them to be most helpful with our overall gardening philosophy, so to speak.

The first is "Landrace Gardening" by Joseph Lofthouse. https://permies.com/wiki/162247/Landrace-Gardening-Joseph-Lofthouse

The second is a video and not a book. Back to Eden Gardening. A search on permies will reveal a lot of threads about it. https://www.backtoedenfilm.com/#/
 
pollinator
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Frankly, there’s not one single best book for me. Over the decades I bought lots of gardening books of all sorts, including old time  farming and food production, old time skills….in addition to more modern stuff. There was no way of googling something or searching YouTube. So I read everything that pertained to food production, picking out and applying the "gems" to my own efforts.
 
pollinator
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For me, Gaia's Garden has been most helpful. Although I agree with Su Ba. I wish that there were lots more before and after photos in Gaia's Garden but it has been a wonderful reference and helped me to push through with confidence when it really doesn't look like the garden will come together (can I even grow anything?! = me lamenting in early stages). The can-do attitude in Ten Acres Enough is really inspiring and I tend to revisit that book every few years. Gardening books are so wonderful. It's my two favorite things all rolled into one!
 
Steward of piddlers
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From a no-till perspective, I got a LOT of value out of The Living Soil Handbook.

It contains a fair amount of information that I had not gleaned from other books that I have read so far. The author, Jesse Frost, has a youtube channel/podcast where he frequently is educating folks on how to improve their gardening skills.
 
master gardener
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I find myself wanting to boost Joseph's book. Or maybe one of Carol Deppe's. Or maybe one of the old Ruth Stout reprints. No, wait, Masanobu Fukuoka! Aaaaah.

OK, you're asking for a single book. I'm going with this one: https://permies.com/wiki/53454/Essential-Guide-Radical-Reliant-Gardening

I'm due to reread it because I want to see if I was just in the right place at the right time or if it's genuinely brilliant. And I want to get it on the book review grid if it isn't already. But that book most got me jazzed about gardening.
 
steward & manure connoisseur
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The book that set a fire under me to start, when I was living in an apartment and starting to feel a stirring to "do something different", was A Nation of Farmers.
https://civileats.com/2009/10/21/a-nation-of-farmers-a-handbook-for-revolutionaries/
The link has a good review of it. From there I went towards gardening specific handbooks, and soil books, but this was the one that got me thinking about different ways to do things.
 
steward
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A lot of great books have been mentioned so I will add:

The Sustainable Vegetable Garden by John Jeavons

More on John Jeavons:

https://permies.com/t/16349/John-Jeavons-Method

https://permies.com/wiki/20295/grow-vegetables-John-Jeavons
 
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I got a huge amount out of Steve Solomon's Gardening When it Counts early in my journey.
 
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The RHS Encyclopedia of Gardening has been my go-to for years, it covers practically everything and I still find myself flipping through it when I'm unsure about something.
 
master pollinator
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In practical terms, I would say a newspaper rather than a book. Not for reading though -- the newspaper kept my knees clean and dry while I was planting and weeding.

I suppose the only book I can think of might have been Thoreau's Walden. Not because it held particularly useful advice -- I grew up on a farm and helped with our large gardens, learning many lessons. But rather, it fomented the big idea that growing food for oneself was a philosophical and social statement rather than a menial chore. I think that still fits.
 
Timothy Norton
Steward of piddlers
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Semi-related, I wanted to shamelessly plug the Permies Book Review Grid.

If you are looking for something new to read that is permie-related, there are a BUNCH of books listed with reviews made by permie people like you.

Check it out!
 
gardener
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When I was a kid I read the "Square Foot Gardening" book and it showed me that I could be a gardener. It also taught me the basics of building healthy soil.

As an adult, I garden in such a harsh climate that my own experimentation has been most important, but this year Ruth Stout's "No Work Garden Book" really resonated with me--and I successfully grew potatoes in a desert climate with her method!
 
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If you can only have one book on how all things growing works, it is Eco-farm by Charles Walters. Found this book 30 plus years ago and it has guided me well in my biological farming and gardening. I have given copies to those working with me on our organic transition and have said we are doing what we are doing because of this book.

https://bookstore.acresusa.com/products/eco-farm?_pos=1&_sid=f2fcd3411&_ss=r

Took a crop residue sample (soybeans with many weeds) last fall and had it tested. The results were much like a plant tissue test taken on volunteer oats the fall previous except the ppm for iron was quite high, 550 ppm vs about 100 as normal. In Eco-farm on iron, "plants ashed out will have as little as 10 ppm or as much as 1,000 or 2,000 ppm". So my 550 ppm on iron is in the somewhat normal range, much better to have an adequate iron uptake than not enough. Gives me a hint my soils are now starting to function biologically after years of chemical farming.
 
pollinator
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Perennial Vegetables by Eric Toensmeier. Opened my eyes to a hundred new possibilities.

Tree Crops by Russell Smith for big picture planning.
 
master gardener
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I think Masanobu Fukuoka's books indelibly messed uphelped me a lot, not just with gardening but with everything else...I find his philosophy perpetually relevant through whatever challenges my life provides.

The One Straw Revolution is short and poetic, but I think I learned the most from The Natural Way of Farming.

I think he is the reason why instead of struggling to garden against predator pressure and logistical difficulties, I am okay with letting go of certain crops and projects, and adjusting my diet to the landscape rather than the other way around. He always said, eat what is available at each time of year because that is the healthiest and tastiest for one who has regained their natural taste, and that's what I have found. I have found so many wild plants that are excellent as food, and a few cultivated ones too that like the soil well, especially potatoes, garlic, and other root vegetables including perennial camassias.
 
pioneer
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Well, i can't list just 1 book.
As a young gardener, back in my 20s, i was gifted a great resource of a book titled "The Self Sufficient Gardener- the compleat illustrated guide to planning, growing,  storing and preserving your own garden produce " by John Seymour. It was, and still is, my #1 for the growing requirements of many food plants, as it lists each type with headings like soil and climate, soil treatment,  propagation, pests and diseases...I now have and use "The NEW Self Sufficient Gardener "...The book begins with an introduction chapter covering organic gardening, small animals (rabbits and chickens  for meat, eggs and manure), and how nature's cycles effect growing. And I love the Illustrated Index of Vegetables,  Fruits and Herbs.
I have done alot of notations in this book to help keep vital information in one book. The table of contents lists plants according to family and that confuses me,  so I added what I'd understand.  For example, fabaceae is the legumes, and brassicaceae is the cabbage/broccoli family. This book is not listed in the above mentioned list of great resource books.

My 2nd most referenced book is Carrots Love Tomatoes by Louise Riotte. This is my companion plants resource. I've taken the vitals from this volume and copied them into the inside covers of my copy of Self Sufficient Gardener, listing companions,  allies and enemies for my preferred crops.

And because one cannot be self-sufficient in raising your own food year after year without saving seed, another gifted resource book is Suzanne Ashworth's Seed to Seed. Before this book i didn't realize the level of cross pollination between crops in the same family groups.  I learned the hard way.
I'd saved seed from a zucchini and shared some with a Facebook friend. When hers fruited, those zucchini were the right shape but wrong color; they were white! I was grateful that I had kept a map of what was planted where. Referring to it, I saw that I'd put a white patty pan squash beside the zucchini. I looked up the 2 squash in Seed to Seed and discovered both are pepo types and that in the squash tribe, any 2 in the same sub-tribe can and will cross. So 2 pepo, 2 maxima, 2 moschata, etc. will cross pollinate and the seed saved will often show the effects of this.
I now don't buy squash seed if that sub-tribe information isn't present. And if I plan to save seed with the idea of continuing the variety,  I'll only plant 1 variety.  1 pepo, usually a  zucchini; 1 moschata,  often butternut, etc.

Of course I have other gardening books. My personal library of physical books is far more extensive than I have room for since our cross country move, but these are the volumes I made sure to have available after settling in.
 
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Bill Mollison's Permaculture, a Practical Guide for a Sustainable Future because it has the bigger picture.  It talks about how everything interacts, how to build a self-maintaining system, make observations about how Nature/Forests/Prairies do it, how to build soil, hugels (although I do hugel trenches in my Mediterranean climate,) biodiversity, storing water, plants that help each other, nitrogen fixing plants, water purification designs.  It just goes on and on.  

 
Beware the other head of science - it bites! Nibble on this message:
Your suggestions have been mashed into the PIE page - wuddyathink?
https://permies.com/t/369924/suggestions-mashed-PIE-page-wuddyathink
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