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About the Author

Pam Penick is a landscape designer, garden writer, photographer, and award-winning blogger who has replaced many lawns in her lifetime, including her own. She is a contributor to Garden Design, Fine Gardening, and Martha Stewart's blog At Home in the Garden. Penick lives in Austin, Texas, and blogs mostrar mais at www.penick.net/digging. mostrar menos

Obras por Pam Penick

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Conhecimento Comum

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female

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Since I live in an area that is normally quite dry and currently experiencing a drought, I'm always interested in finding ways to conserve water - and save on the watering bill! And I really like the approach Pam Penick takes in this book. She offers a number of ways to save and conserve but isn't too heavy-handed or self-righteously preachy about it like I often see.

Penick explains different ways to take advantage of the rain like collecting it in cisterns, from rain barrels to giant thousand-gallon bins both above and below-ground. That's something I'll try to do this summer. She also talks about ways to keep the water on your yard longer with berms, swales, terraces, and permeable paving, giving it a chance to soak in instead of running off into the gutter. I do wish the section on graywater had been a bit fuller, but one tip I found very interesting - and which I'd never considered before - was to catch the condensate from the air conditioning unit, and it shows a picture with a bucket dug into the ground under the pipe.

Of course, she also covers planting options, from selecting native plants to grouping plants with like water needs to changing the way you water. She also discusses minimizing the lawn to what you really need and use - something I've always been hesitant about, since I grew up with a relatively expansive lawn where we ran over ever inch of it in our games and play. The plant section I thought was a little on the weak side, but this is information that is often regional and is probably best approached on an individual basis.

My only real criticism of the book is the format - a rather small font-type (I'm guessing around 9 pt Times New Roman) that gets even smaller in the photo captions. I probably just need to go get reading glasses, but I find it a bit of a strain on the eyes. Also, some of the pictures are very small - about an inch square - and one of the things I most love about gardening books is looking at the pictures. There's one in particular illustrating berms and basis where it took me a while to realize it was showing rain puddling around the trees and plants in a yard. But this book is better than some Ten-Speed books at minimizing the number of small photos, and the ones included are mostly very good at illustrating the ideas and not just being pretty.

Overall, this is a good book for those of us looking to cut back on our water usage.
… (mais)
 
Assinalado
J.Green | 2 outras críticas | Nov 22, 2016 |
Native Texans know that the recent heavy rain and widespread destructive flooding is an aberration in the weather pattern. Dry weather, bordering or deep in drought is the normal state of soil conditions in Texas. The Water-Saving Garden: How To Grow A Gorgeous Garden With A Lot Less Water by Pam Penick might just help you plan for the next dry spell and beyond no matter where you live.

A major thrust of the book is the theme that a water saving garden does not have to be just cacti and succulents. First, you as the gardener have to accept the idea that your garden has to adapt to the local environment and not the other way around. As homeowners here recently were reminded both visually and economically it is very hard to maintain certain types of grass filled lawns when severe water restrictions are enacted and enforced.

Broken into five parts this colorful book opens up with “Part One: DRINK UP the beauty & ingenuity of a water-saving garden.” Through text and numerous photographs of examples in gardens in Texas, Arizona, and elsewhere that illustrate the concept of taking advantage of stopping water runoff. Various landscaping techniques are illustrated as to what can be done to make sure that the rainfall that happens is either captured and contained or diverted so that it does not just wastefully flow into the streets and ultimately the city sewer system.

Capturing the water is also the theme of theme of “Part Two: make your garden a WATER SAVER, not a water guzzler.” Starting on page 29 going beyond rain barrels and cisterns, which are discussed in various sizes, other options are covered such as a “rain garden.” This is an area of your yard that is depressed and filled with plants that don’t mind being flooded. Dirty water from your drive way, down spots, and are other surface areas that would not allow rain to penetrate is channeled into this area. The plants clean the water as it is collected. That cleaner water eventually soaks in and moves its way down to the groundwater table and underground aquifers. Other ideas such as micro basins, berms, swales, terraces, irrigation techniques, paving choices, and more are discussed here accompanied by numerous photographs to illustrate key points.

“Part Three: PLANTING the water saving garden” on page 113 starts off with obvious idea-- get rid of the lawn. The plants that would do better are discussed and showcased. This includes various native grasses that give one the illusion of a lawn with far less water or mowing. Suggestions for various additional garden features as well as native and “well-adapted” plants are found throughout the book as well as specifically in this section. Get away from the idea that plants need to be in rigid lines and embrace a sort of organized chaos where groups of plants all gather and thrive together. The point is also made that beyond the air pollution caused by leaf blowers is the fact that their use can strip topsoil and nutrients from your landscaping which is damaging in the short and long run. A nice added bonus to this section is the piece on container gardening for those in apartments or condos who have limited space.

One can also bring water features to such porches and that idea is a small piece of the ‘Part Four: oasis or mirage? creating the illusion of water in the garden.” Most of the ideas and techniques discussed here starting on page 163 apply to landscaping, but some can be modified for those of us apartment and condo dwellers.

“Part Five: 1001 Plants for water saving gardens” comes next. Because the detailed list is for the entire United States it may contain plants that are considered “invasive” in your area or region. As the author points out, you should make sure you check the list for your area and avoid plants that are considered invasive--even if sold in local stores-- so that your help protect native plants and habitats. The list begins with trees on page 198 and goes through perennials, grasses, ground covers, and more before ending on page 222.

An acknowledgement page, a two page resource list followed by three page photography and design credit list, and a five page index brings this colorful and inspirational book to a close.

The Water-Saving Garden: How To Grow A Gorgeous Garden With A Lot Less Water by Pam Penick is an informative and visual treat for readers, gardeners, and others. The 330 page book is packed with informative tips and suggestions all geared toward making you being as successful as possible when you decide to transform your landscape. It doesn’t do the work for you, obviously, but it can certainly save you a lot in time, effort, and financial resources if you consider the suggestions found here.

The Water-Saving Garden: How To Grow A Gorgeous Garden With A Lot Less Water
Pam Penick
http://www.penick.net
Ten Speed Press (The Crown Publishing Group)
http://crownpublishing.com/imprint/ten-speed-press/
February 2016
ISBN# 978-1-60774-793-2
Paperback (also available on eBook format)
240 Pages
$19.99

Material supplied by the good folks of the Plano Texas Library System.

Kevin R. Tipple ©2016
… (mais)
 
Assinalado
kevinrtipple | 2 outras críticas | May 30, 2016 |
This book is jam packed full of ideas, I love the chapter on creating illusions of water in your garden, I am going to try a few of these this Spring. It also tells you the plants for water saving, so many wonderful ideas. I would recommend this book for anyone trying to save on water.
 
Assinalado
mware1961 | 2 outras críticas | Feb 17, 2016 |
This book considers what else you can do with your own little patch of ground besides compete with Mr. Jones for the most emerald green perfect lawn. In reality, the author doesn’t advocate making the lawn entirely disappear, unless you happen to live in a zone where the resources needed to keep it going are outsized. It’s a pretty balanced discussion of all sorts of options. Hardscaping, buildings, ponds, perennials, and grasses that don’t need mowing – even discussing the pros and cons of artificial lawns. It’s meant to get the reader out of a thinking rut and being creative about low maintenance yarding. She has regional experts make a few recommendations specific to each part of the US.… (mais)
½
 
Assinalado
2wonderY | 2 outras críticas | Feb 1, 2016 |

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