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18 Reviews
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
Gardening for Joy,
By beth claire (Monmouth, Oregon USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Gaia's Garden: A Guide to Home-Scale Permaculture (Paperback)
This book has brought some fantastic ideas into my garden. The book presents some new ideas that have opened up some wonderful possibilities in my whole yard. I deeply enjoyed that the book neither addresses only those with vast horticultural degrees nor speaks only to novices. The author succinctly makes his point and backs it with interesting and insightful expamples.I have been gardening organically for over 25 years and can handle most problems with a bit of effort. This book has changed my view and greatly decreased the amount of time needed to maintain my garden. Rather than responding to the problems as they occur, it gives ingenious ways to head them off or to turn them into positives. I highly recommend this book to anyone who needs new ideas for their garden, regardless of size.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars
Frustratingly Inconsistent!,
By Lorraine H. Filipek (Golden, Colorado USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Gaia's Garden: A Guide to Home-Scale Permaculture (Paperback)
This book does a great job of summarizing the concepts in Mollison's "Permaculture." It also contains good tables on plants for various purposes and a good resource list. But it has a very BIG flaw! Hemenway is supposedly telling us how to design a permaculture space at the home scale, yet nowhere can I find that he has any concern for his neighbors. He thinks only of his OWN yard and ignores the fact that at such a small scale, what you plant to protect YOUR yard may have serious consequences for your NEIGHBOR's yard. Please THINK and TALK to your neighbors at the design stage, BEFORE you block their sun or views. I know from hard experience. I live in a passive solar house and my neighbor to the south planted a row of Ponderosa pines along his north boundary to protect against wind. When those trees get larger, they will block my view of the mountains, but more importantly, they will block the sun from my passive solar house and most of my property ALL winter! Please remember that permaculture means not only relating to the land and food animals, but, just as importantly, to your neigbors!! Designing for all is MUCH more complex than Hemenway lets on!
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
Fresh look at an old subject....,
By
This review is from: Gaia's Garden: A Guide to Home-Scale Permaculture (Paperback)
I've been organic gardening since the 1960s and I find GAIA'S GARDEN--A GUIDE TO HOME-SCALE PERMACULTURE contains much useful information for the gardener who wants to work with Mother Nature instead of against her. In his book, Toby Hemingway says "permaculture is a set of techniques and principles for designing sustainable human settlements." Permaculture uses organic gardening principles to deal with big as well as little problems. Permaculture is involved with the local rose and the ecosystem within which the local rose lives. Most of the ideas Hemenway suggests have been "out there" for some time, but Hemingway combines and organizes this cumulative knowledge into a coherent approach. While I don't agree with everything Hemenway suggests, I think most of his ideas are worth trying. Hemenway seems to have acquired much of his hands-on experience in semi-arid areas on the West Coast, so some of his "live and let-live" tactics may not work on the more lush East Coast. For example, Hemenway appears to be opposed to fighting certain kinds of invasive plants, some of them exotic (i.e. not native), but to me the whole purpose of my garden is to have something that does not look like the rest of the surrounding area--whatever that is--so, I will never give up the effort to keep certain plants OUT. On the other hand, I have discovered I can tolerate some "wildness" in my patch, and have given over certain parts of the yard to natural vegetation (as long as it does not include, poison ivy, bindweed, prickle vine..you get the picture) which the National Wildlife Federation would approve as bird-friendly. Hemenway's "plan" is geared to the 1/4 acre lot, so folks in the suburbs with more space than me may be able to accomodate more of his ideas. However, I think some of his ideas can be adapted to a smaller space. One thing I really like about this book is his novel approach to laying out beds. No raised boxes or perennial borders here. He goes for keyholes, spirals, wreaths, and all sorts of novel shapes. And they work. I've laid out beds to fit my space and the result is some oddly designed garden areas that are beautiful (my whole yard is a collection of garden beds, I have NO grass). I particularly support the building of swales to retain ground moisture, and using leftover woody material to build "Hugelkultur" compost heaps. Whenever we replace fence material, trim bushes or trees, or create other woody waste, we bury it at the back of the garden. I also throw newspapers, paper towels (7th Generation of course), and other biodegradable paper into the compost bin. And speaking of compost, adding it directly to the bed is a good idea. Just slip it under the existing mulch, or grab a shovelful of mulch to toss over it. This way the garden gets the full benefit of the decomposing material, not the area around the compost bin. This is a wonderful book filled with wonderful ideas that hold the key to saving our world.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
The best gardening book I've ever bought,
By
This review is from: Gaia's Garden: A Guide to Home-Scale Permaculture (Paperback)
For the past few months I've been reading books and learning all kinds of new things. Sustainable agriculture. Edible landscaping. Naturalistic landscaping. Agroforestry. I learned alot, but something seemed missing. And then I found Gaia's Garden. While I was reading it the first time, I kept thinking, "This is it. This is exactly what I've been looking for." This book combines all these other concepts, adds still more, and makes it all easy to understand. There are lots of things I loved about this book. But the most important was the way Mr. Hemenway explains guilds. He gives specific examples, which you can follow pretty much exactly. But then he gives the information to go beyond his examples and create totally new guilds specifically designed for your site. If I had to give up all my gardening books and keep only one, this is the book I'd keep.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
Rebirthing Eden,
By Nick Routledge (Eugene, OR) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Gaia's Garden: A Guide to Home-Scale Permaculture (Paperback)
I must admit to a strong personal bias. I hang with the Food Not Lawns collective outta Eugene, Oregon, and Toby Hemenway is a not unfamiliar (and highly regarded) fixture in our neck of the woods. Indeed, a recent article I penned for Oregon Tilth, the newspaper of the Oregon organics community, was largely devoted to the implications of this text. Here's a brief excerpt from a sidebar to that article:"A recent review of Toby Hemenways' Gaia's Garden remarked on Hemenway's "friendly and muscular style." In person, decorous, attentive and gently spoken, his disarmingly modest manner hides one humdinger of an intellect, informed by an experience born of years transforming a clearcut in Southern Oregon into an edible food forest, and his work as associate editor of The Permaculture Activist, the de facto clearing house for permie factoids in the northern hemisphere. "Trained as a geneticist, Hemenway's approach bears the hallmark of a rigorous scientific training, but whereas most prior permaculture texts tend to resemble fat, dry textbooks, Hemenway's touch is deft and approachable - a useful quality, given the vast, rich, detailed tapestry of ideas he presents that lends context, meaning and direction to the process of playing god." If you're interested in knowing more, the full text of the article is at: ... Suffice to say, within the Paradise Gardening community hereabouts, we consider this text a seminal work, and refer to it as the de facto workbook for visionary gardeners. n.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
from an armchair permaculturist,
By "griffin_girl" (San Francisco, CA United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Gaia's Garden: A Guide to Home-Scale Permaculture (Paperback)
I loved this book, showed it to my stepmother and she read it in one sitting. We are both totally inspired, and I've been spending a lot of time day dreaming about permaculture design courses. I live in the city and can't do much more than keep a worm bin, but SOME DAY! I've read Mollison's 'Intro to Permaculture' book, equally inspiring, but perhaps overwhelming due to the scale he discusses. 'Gaia's Garden' is smaller bite, and brings it all together. One thing I liked is that he goes through the design process step by step. I get easily overwhelmed and excited and thus paralyzed, so I found his break down into 'baby steps' encouraging.My only problem is that I wish it had more photographs. But then again, if it did, I wouldn't be as motivated to go and tour the permaculture institutes here in northern california!
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
North American first Regional Permaculture Book,
By wesley roe (Santa Barbara Ca) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Gaia's Garden: A Guide to Home-Scale Permaculture (Paperback)
this is a amazing book for the backyard gardener viewpoint, it takes your garden and ties it total ecosystem that it is interconnected to. throughout the book there are a number of shaded highlights that explain the workings of permaculture systems, what is permaculture and practical ways of designing and putting together a garden with permaculture principles. this is a very useful practical book that will help turn your garden into a living ecosystem that interconnects to the surrounding world. It helps you make decision on the use of local native plants in your garden and also helps in the selection of other useful plants that could be grown in your region. It stresses the use periennal plants and plant guilds that grow well together. The book represent the first truly Permaculture Book written for United States growing regions and climates. This is already a popular book here in Santa Barbara Ca, where there is a great interest in learning how to use Permaculture in your own back yard and life. It helps to practically explain why a permaculture designed garden is a living natural system not just a garden. The way your garden design unfolds from using the book is truly exciting as you see that a biodiversity of plants planted for insects food and animals can exist in your own back yard.The use of water and other resources in your landscape is explain so you can see how they interconnect. Yes this book is explains all this and more so beautifully and simply.
5.0 out of 5 stars
What an inspiring book!,
By A Customer
This review is from: Gaia's Garden: A Guide to Home-Scale Permaculture (Paperback)
This book gives a wonderful introduction to permaculture. I had absolutely no idea what it was before reading the book. A one-sentence definition is worse than none. It is exciting to read about how the various parts of a garden interconnect.I love the various shapes he suggest, such as keyhole gardens. I especially liked the way he guides you through the process of creating guilds. And it is good to know I can use all those plants I had to eliminate when planning a traditional garden. That is one of the nicest features of these gardens. I have to admit the title is offputting. I thought this was some New Age system. Fortunately I read the reviews at this site, so that when I saw the book, I decided to give it a try. It is a very, down-to-earth, convincing book. Nothing New Age about it. I am excited and want to get started using some of these ideas.
5.0 out of 5 stars
accessible permaculture to homescale gardeners,
By A Customer
This review is from: Gaia's Garden: A Guide to Home-Scale Permaculture (Paperback)
Gaia's Garden presents revolutionary gardening ideas and plans for the homescale garden. It has opened my mind to the myriad possibilities of growing with nature rather than against her.Thank you to Hemenway, Todd, and the many pioneers in this field.
5.0 out of 5 stars
The essence of Permaculture, with loads of specifics,
By Byron E. Butchart (Charlottesville, VA, United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Gaia's Garden: A Guide to Home-Scale Permaculture (Paperback)
Toby Hemingway has taken on a large task: explaining ecological gardening in a clear, accessible manner. Having taught Permaculture Design myself, I was curious how Toby would approach the subject. I came away quite impressed. He uses his deep experience with the subject to make a complex, multi-layered concept easy to grasp and easy to implement.Building gardens that function the way healthy ecosystems do will reduce your work load, reduce the toxins you need to control pests, and will yield both beauty and bounty. This book is the guide you have been waiting for. Like a trusted friend with dirt under his fingernails, Toby leads you gently and wisely toward a much more pleasant existence. |
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Gaia's Garden: A Guide to Home-Scale Permaculture by Toby Hemenway (Paperback - April 1 2001)
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