Doug Welsh’s Texas Garden Almanac (Month-by-Month Guide)
Thursday, April 09th, 2009 | Author: Home and Garden
Price : $16.47

Product Description
Think of Doug Welsh’s Texas Garden Almanac as a giant monthly calendar for the entire state–a practical, information-packed, month-by-month guide for gardeners and yardeners. This book provides everything you need to know about flowers and garden design; trees, shrubs, and vines; lawns; vegetable, herb, and fruit gardening; and soil, mulch, water, pests, and plant care. It will help you to create beautiful, productive, healthy gardens and have fun doing it.
Writer, educator, and broadcaster Doug Welsh gives a wealth of practical gardening advice in this book. Encouraging us to think like a plant, Welsh holds pruning school in February, conducts a lawn clinic in April, builds a perennial garden in September, and shows us how to grow fresh vegetables for Thanksgiving. Yet this barely scratches the surface of all that is offered in this comprehensive, fun-to-use guide. With colorful and instructive illustrations and helpful information boxes, plant lists, charts, sidebars, and tips, the book is written in the engaging, conversational style that anyone who has listened to Welsh’s radio show will recognize.
Whether your passion is roses or green beans, wildflowers or trees, reading this book is like having a personal garden consultant and friend at your side. Doug Welsh’s Texas Garden Almanac will inspire you throughout the year and make you more eager than ever to get out into your garden.
Customer Reviews
Review date : 2008-09-05 
This book is an excellent resource for the less experienced gardener. It provides location specific information making it a very useful tool. Tried to use few others first without much satisfaction, but LOVED this book. The organization of topics and by month make it incredibly user friendly.
Review date : 2008-03-26 
I like the layout of this book. I read it cover to cover within the first week but have continued to use it as a reference. I like the month-by-month layout and it covers the majority of topics that a Texas gardener wants to know about. It’s sort of like combining the best parts of several books…and the format is easy to read and is slightly humerous. The book covers several areas of Texas, so no matter where you live the book covers your area. There are some topics where I wanted more depth, so I used the internet or library to find more detailed information. This book also debunked some of the theories I had learned about specific gardening methods…old wives tales that were truly tales. All said, I would purchase this book again and recommend it for novice to experienced gardeners (stopping short of master gardeners, but they’re the ones writing the books anyway).
Review date : 2008-02-20 
This is a very helpful book for Texas gardeners. The format is user friendly and it would be a great addition to anyone’s gardening library.
Review date : 2008-01-25 
Excellent book! Very beneficial to both long-term and novice gardeners.
Excellent format and the month to month guide is very useful.
Great choice.
Review date : 2007-11-11 
Finally we have a companion to the nationwide Farmer’s Almanac –
designed for our unique state – our climate and our plants.
Doug Welsh’s Texas Garden Almanac is the definitive almanac on
Texas gardening, covering indepth topics such as pruning trees,
attracting butterflies, and managing fire ants.
In addition, readers will find handy quick-tips including: using
clear plastic soda bottles for mini greenhouses, avoiding the
epidemic of crepe murder (over-pruning crepe myrtles), and creating
herb gardens in mini containers.
Hundreds of delightful illustrations by Aletha St. Romain –
including a beautiful amaryllis illustration for the chapter on
December – make the book a joy for the eyes.
It is so jam-packed with information, tips, and useful
illustrations, it would make a life-long garden guide for a new
gardener. Then too, experienced gardeners would find the book a
wonderful edition to their gardening book library.
As we become more dependent on food sources from millions of miles
away, the need to garden more closely in our own area is of primary
concern. For this reason, every school should consider ordering
copies for students. And if a high school student shows any
inclination toward gardening, this would be a treasured gift.
Medium weight slick paper with fading violet and lime colored edges
make the book wonderful to browse. Every library in Texas needs
this gem.
Valerie Brown, Texas Master Gardener



