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A chicken in every yard : the Urban Farm Store’s guide to chicken keeping

book Robert and Hannah Litt own the Urban Farm Store in Portland and wrote “A Chicken in Every Yard” from experience keeping their own chickens, and helping their chicken-keeping customers. While they don’t disapprove of raising chickens for food, theirs are clearly pets and the book encourages this attitude with chapters like “Parenting Your Peeps.” There is a lot of detail about different types and breeds, including recommendation lists such as “best for children.” All stages of raising and caring are covered in depth, but the garden is only briefly mentioned. If your focus is solely on chickens, this book is an excellent choice.

Excerpted from the Winter 2013 Arboretum Bulletin.

Free-range chicken gardens : how to create a beautiful, chicken-friendly yard

Free range chickens book jacket

First review:

Jessi Bloom is a strong advocate for chickens in almost any garden setting, and in “Free-Range Chicken Gardens,” she provides detailed information on compatible plantings–including those that provide food for chickens–and structures that meet the multiple needs of fowl and flora. There is a lot of well-organized information in these pages on all other related topics, too, making this of value to chicken keepers at any experience level. But you can also just enjoy the profiles of gardeners and their chickens (many are local) or the many superb photographs (by Kate Baldwin) of contented hens in their gardens, proving their value as a natural compliment.

Excerpted from the Winter 2013 Arboretum Bulletin.

 

 

Second review:

How does allowing chickens to range freely work with a garden?  Very well – it just takes a lot of compromise and ingenuity.  A book that deeply addresses these issues is Free-Range Chicken Gardens by Jessi Bloom of Seattle.

Here are specific guidelines for the design of a chicken compatible landscape.  How to protect prize plants while still giving your flock the opportunity to roam and find a more natural diet.  As a gardener, you are encouraged to try plant selections that will nourish your hens, or shelter them from predators or weather.  The advantages can work both ways.  Some plants will screen your chicken run, or even give off fragrance to mask odors.

Bloom recognizes this doesn’t work for everyone.  “If your garden must be perfect…then you might not want chickens free ranging.”

 

Published in Garden Notes: Northwest Horticultural Society, Fall 2018

Second Nature: Tales from The Montlake Fill

bookAny reader of Connie Sidles’ first book, (“In My Nature: A Birder’s Year at the Montlake Fill”–2009) will be delighted to learn she has written and published a second collection of her observations, insights, and quiet life lessons gleaned from her continuing visits to the landfill known officially as the Union Bay Natural Area (UBNA). The style of Second Nature is much like the first, but there are more great close-up photographs of birds, including rarities like a Lazuli Bunting or a Western Scrub-Jay.

Excerpted from the Fall 2012 Arboretum Bulletin.

Evergreen Muse: The Art of Elizabeth Colborne

bookA strong woman from the early 20th century was Elizabeth Colborne (1885-1948), who grew up in Bellingham. She was an artist that worked in several media with various subjects, but is best remembered for her color woodcuts of northwest forest scenes, with detailed and accurate renditions of our native trees and other plants. Evergreen Muse by David Martin is a catalog of her works displayed in an exhibit at the Whatcom Museum in Bellingham during the summer of 2011.

Excerpted from the Fall 2012 Arboretum Bulletin.

Where Lilacs Still Bloom

bookHulda Klager (1863-1960) was a Pacific Northwest pioneer. This Woodland, Washington farm wife survived numerous hardships, but is best remembered for the wonderful collection of lilacs she hybridized and introduced in the first half of the 20th century, and the garden now open to the public that displays those lilacs. The historical novel “Where Lilacs Still Bloom” by Jane Kirkpatrick is largely an accurate biography, with only minor liberties taken to amalgamate some of the real life personalities in Klager’s life.

Excerpted from the Fall 2012 Arboretum Bulletin.

Small Conifers for Small Gardens

bookA local garden and nursery that’s not well known is Coenosium Gardens in Eatonville. Owner Robert Fincham has traveled widely in his quest for dwarf conifers and the book Small Conifers for Small Gardens catalogs the many fine dwarf firs, spruce, pines, hemlocks, and assorted other species he has collected and grown. If you have considered adding conifers that won’t outgrow your garden, this introduction to the merits of over two hundred choices, along with anecdotes about each, is a must read.

Excerpted from the Fall 2012 Arboretum Bulletin.

What I’ve Learned from Bonsai

What I've learned from bonsai cover George Bingham is based in Olympia and had been engaged in bonsai for about nine years when “What I’ve Learned from Bonsai” was published in 2008. This very personal book shares his observation about both the art of bonsai and the life lessons he has gained while working with his plants and living with multiple sclerosis.

Excerpted from the Fall 2012 Arboretum Bulletin.

Gnarly Branches, Ancient Trees

bookGnarly Branches, Ancient Trees is a biography of Dan Robinson, a bonsai gardener noted for his naturalistic style. While one could learn much from the examples, this is not a how-to book, but rather a celebration of one man’s enthusiasm and perseverance for his art. This led to his establishing Elandan Gardens near Bremerton. His story is well told by the photography and writing of several of his admirers in the local world of bonsai.

Excerpted from the Fall 2012 Arboretum Bulletin.

Sunset Western Garden Book

bookThe grandparent of all gardening books for the Pacific Northwest and rest of the west remains the “Sunset Western Garden Book.” Now in its new, ninth edition, the proven encyclopedic formula, along with essays, extensive plant selection lists for specific needs, and the much valued Sunset climate zones (all updated) continue to make this a must on any western gardener’s shelf. The main addition since the last edition of 2007 is photographs in the encyclopedia–a nice update!

Excerpted from the Fall 2012 Arboretum Bulletin.

Native Plant User Guide

bookGardeners east of the Cascades will be pleased to have this addition to the limited collection of garden books for their region. Native Plant User Guide is published by the nursery Rugged Country Plants in Milton-Freewater, Oregon and, while self-promoting, there is far more descriptive detail and cultural help than you’d expect from a nursery catalog. With careful reading, gardeners west of the Cascades will pick up useful ideas, too.

Excerpted from the Fall 2012 Arboretum Bulletin.