My tiny veg plot / Lia Leendertz ; photography by Mark Diacono.

By: Leendertz, Lia [author.]Contributor(s): Diacono, Mark [photographer.]Material type: TextTextPublisher: London : Pavilion, 2015Copyright date: ©2015Description: 159 pages : colour illustrations ; 20 x 24 cmContent type: text | still image Media type: unmediated Carrier type: volumeISBN: 9781910496053; 1910496057Other title: My tiny veg plot : grow your own in surprisingly small spacesSubject(s): Vegetable gardening | Container gardening | Small gardens | Urban gardening | Square foot gardeningDDC classification: 712 | 635 LOC classification: SB469-476.4Summary: FRUIT & VEGETABLES. Food can be grown just about anywhere, and lack of space should not put you off growing and enjoying the taste of your own fresh vegetables. Not everyone has access to outside space or what we traditionally think of as a garden, but we all have window ledges, doorways, often stairways, sometimes even a balcony or roof space. This book offers solutions and inspirations for these tricky spots that we frequently overlook or neglect, and highlights some unusual growing spaces such as a minuscule balcony in Bristol, an innovative installation of hexagonal polytunnels full of salad leaves in Amiens, France, and an ingenious self-sufficient growing system that provides a wealth of vegetables in an old swimming pool in Phoenix, Arizona.
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Northam Adult Nonfiction
635 LEE (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 31111066400167

FRUIT & VEGETABLES. Food can be grown just about anywhere, and lack of space should not put you off growing and enjoying the taste of your own fresh vegetables. Not everyone has access to outside space or what we traditionally think of as a garden, but we all have window ledges, doorways, often stairways, sometimes even a balcony or roof space. This book offers solutions and inspirations for these tricky spots that we frequently overlook or neglect, and highlights some unusual growing spaces such as a minuscule balcony in Bristol, an innovative installation of hexagonal polytunnels full of salad leaves in Amiens, France, and an ingenious self-sufficient growing system that provides a wealth of vegetables in an old swimming pool in Phoenix, Arizona.

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