Product Details
How to Make a Forest Garden

How to Make a Forest Garden
By Patrick Whitefield

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Product Description

How To Make A Forest Garden is a step-by-step, DIY guide to creating a maximum output food producing garden for minimum labour.
This highly practical, yet inspiring book gives you everything you need to know in order to create a beautiful and productive forest garden, including:
Basic principles • Layout • How to choose plants
• Details of over one hundred plants, from apples to mushrooms
• A comprehensive account of perennial and self-seeding vegetables
• A step-by-step guide to creating your garden
• Full details of an example garden, and pictures of many more

Forest gardening is an important element of permaculture. This book explains in detail permaculture design for temperate climates and contains much of interest for anybody wanting to introduce sustainable practices into their garden.

“Patrick Whitefield’s excellent book gives numerous practical details of the steps that many of us can take to realise this alluring vision.”
Robert Hart


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #10637 in Books
  • Published on: 1996-01-01
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 184 pages

Editorial Reviews

Clean Slate, No21, 1996
With Patrick's enthusiasm for the subject and beautiful photographs....the book is an inspiration, as well as a practical guide.

Allotment and Leisure Gardener, No3, 1996
This highly inspirational book gives everything you need to know in order to create a beautiful and productive forest garden.

Benign Design, No8, 1996
....order this book NOW if you want to create a productive mini-forest in some available corner of your garden.


Customer Reviews

a readable guide to gardening with food-producing plants5
This book is inspirational and practical. It shows how to create an ecosystem of food-producing plants, whether you have a large garden or a few yards of spare ground. The plants are arranged to replicate a woodland or forest environment, with the emphasis on low-maintainance and production of food (fruit, nuts, vegetables) throughout the year. The first chapter considers the environmental philosophy of this type of gardening. Subsequent chapters cover the plant types suitable for the UK, divided into categories of trees, shrubs and ground-layer plants. Each plant type is described in a very readable manner, with details such as basic growing requirements (soil, light, water), eventual size and yield. Although familiar plants such as rhubarb, raspberries, apples, plums are described, less common but equally viable varieties such as medlar and quince, even kiwis, are treated in equal detail.
Most of the emphasis is on the smaller trees which grow to about 3-4 m height. Larger trees such as chequer and walnut are described only briefly. The chapter on vegetables deals with perennial and self-seeding varieties, rather than the annuals of a typical vegetable plot. Particularly useful is a chart showing at what time of year each type of fruit can be harvested. More sketchy is how long it takes from planting the trees to when they start bearing fruit, however, for most varieties this would seem to be about 5 years. The last chapter deals with planning and gives an example of how a medium-sized garden could be adapted for this type of food production. The last few pages give details of nurseries that can supply the plants, so if you want a change from the shiny citrus fruits at the local supermarket, a garden of mulberry and medlar is only a phone call away.

Medium Term Self Sufficiency Beckons . . .5
For those with any amount of land who want it to be productive and efficient, here is a book that:

1. Addresses low energy living holistically (from houses to heating to food production)
2. Recommends approaches to growing food all year without overuse of machinery
3. Chooses crops and approaches that fit with human-powered activity
4. Sets you on the right path on nearly any issue of sustainable living

Excellent reading for those who wish to prepare for the day when the world will not be so comfortable.

The most inspiring gardening book I have read in a long time5
and an excellent source of information, even if you are not particularly interested in planting a full scale forest garden. The sections on trees, bushes and perennial vegetables in particular in a mine of practical advice on how to grow these, and would be of interetest to anyone comtemplating growing anything from rohan or whitebeam to Good king henry, through a variety of fruit bushes.
Buy it for your nearest and dearest gardener at the first occasion :)