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The Truth About Organic Gardening

Benefits, Drawbacks, and the Bottom Line

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Gardeners tend to assume that any organic product is automatically safe for humans and beneficial to the environment—and in most cases this is true. The problem, as Jeff Gillman points out in this fascinating, well-researched book, is that it is not always true, and the exceptions to the rule can pose a significant threat to human health. To cite just one example, animal manures in compost can be a source of harmful E. coli contamination if imporperly treated. Gillman's contention is that all gardening products and practices—organic and synthetic—need to be examined on a case-by-case basis to determine both whether they are safe and whether they accomplish the task for which they are intended.

Ultimately, Gillman concludes, organic methods are preferable in most situations that gardeners are likely to encounter. After reading this eye-opening book, you will understand why, and why knowledge is the gardener's most important tool.

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    • Library Journal

      April 13, 2009
      Gillman, from the Department of Horticultural Science at the University of Minnesota, is a real life Mr. Smarty Pants when it comes to gardening. But don't let that throw you off-his books are quite good. Direct and unfussy, Organic Gardening presents a balanced take on both organic and synthetic approaches to enriching and fertilizing soil and controlling undesirables: weeds, diseases, insects, and pests. Though Gillman tends toward "natural" solutions, including traps, resistant strains of plant, and distributing beneficial insects, he feels that synthetics, used properly and responsibly, have their place (except in the case of pesticides-those he's decidedly against). Garden Remedies is similarly excellent and covers just about any remedy you've ever heard, from beer for attracting (and drowning) slugs (it works, just don't let slug lovers catch wind), to using ammonia as lawn fertilizer (No! Bad idea!). Just like every dude's fave web site, Snopes.com, Gillman provides a brief, well-written history of each practice and the intent behind it before discussing its effectiveness. He also tackles insecticides, fertilizers, fungicides, and herbicides. Dudes will learn that hanging soap or a tuft of hair from a stocking in your garden will indeed repel deer, because these things reek of "anti-nature" and freak the deer out.-Douglas Lord, Connecticut State Lib., Middletown

      Copyright 2009 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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  • English

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