by EliotColeman (Author)
If you love the joys of eating home-garden vegetables but always thought those joys had to stop at the end of summer, this book is for you. Eliot Coleman shows how gardeners can successfully use that sun to raise a wide variety of traditional winter vegetables in backyard cold frames and plastic covered tunnel greenhouses without supplementary heat. Coleman expands upon his own experiences with new ideas learned on a winter-vegetable pilgrimage across the ocean to the acknowledged kingdom of vegetable cuisine, the southern part of France, which lies on the 44th parallel, the same latitude as his farm in Maine.
Format: Illustrated
Pages: 236
Edition: 2nd Revised edition
Publisher: Chelsea Green Publishing Co
Published: 01 Jan 1990
ISBN 10: 1890132276
ISBN 13: 9781890132279
Four-Season Harvest is a magnificent work. It's enticing, inspiring, sensible, and it opens a whole new world for the home grower. --Peter Fossel, Country Journal
Publishers Weekly-
From first sentence to last, Coleman's ( The New Organic Gardener ) book is a delight--an earnest guide written with an impish sense of humor. It will refresh anyone who wants to get the most from a vegetable garden yet doesn't want to devote too much time and energy to the process. Apparently Coleman thoroughly enjoys every phase of gardening--from planting crops to weeding. Who else has ever suggested, only half in jest, dancing with a hoe? Or keeping a pair of ducks for pest patrol? This is that kind of book. It's also a book full of valuable information on how to harvest fresh vegetables and salad ingredients literally year-round--yet without an expensive greenhouse or indoor light garden set-up. Coleman combines succession planting (small sowings three or more times, rather than one big endeavor) with cold-frame growing in the winter months. He includes how-tos for building simple cold-frames. Given the fact that he lives in Maine, his advice seems all the more reliable. He believes in simplicity ( If what I am doing in the garden seems complicated, it is probably wrong ), seasonality (tomatoes in summer, broccoli in fall, mache in February) and diplomacy in the garden (which has more to teach us than just how to grow food ). Here, his philosophy of organic growing is shared easily. The book concludes with an extensive chapter on the vegetables that comprise his cast of characters. Illustrated. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.