From the River Cottage team, how to nurture and grow your own garden fruit.
In the ninth River Cottage Handbook, Mark Diacono explains how to nurture and grow your own garden fruit
From the River Cottage team, how to nurture and grow your own garden fruit.
In the ninth River Cottage Handbook, Mark Diacono explains how to nurture and grow your own garden fruit
Growing fruit at home is a delicious and altogether more enjoyable alternative to buying it in the shops. Mark Diacono offers a practical and accessible guide to making the most of your garden and what it has to offer.The first part of the book is an A-Z of the different varieties of fruit, with old favourites like apples, cherries, plum, blackcurrants, white currants, redcurrants, strawberries, blueberries, gooseberries, raspberries and rhubarb as well as more exotic species like figs, grapes, cranberries, Japanese wine berries and apricots. Each is accompanied by a photograph, with detailed advice on when and how to grow and harvest.In the second part of the book, Mark gives straightforward guidelines on techniques like pruning and training, as well as how to deal with problems or pests. There is a section dedicated to growing under covers and in containers.Introduced by Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall and with 30 delicious recipes, beautiful, full-colour photographs and a directory of useful addresses, this is the ideal reference for any aspiring fruit grower.
“If you have yet to come across the River Cottage Handbooks, I can't recommend them enough”
If you have yet to come across the River Cottage Handbooks, I can’t recommend them enough Rachel Khoo, Daily Mail
A smallholder and writer, Mark Diacono is known for his commitment to sustainable, ethically produced food. Mark leads the Garden Team at Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall's River Cottage - running the garden courses, giving talks and hosting events at River Cottage HQ and appearing in the River Cottage TV series.As well as having a unique take on growing your own food, Mark champions climate change growing, an approach to producing food that takes sustainable advantage of the new weather conditions; Otter Farm, his smallholding in EastDevon, has become famous as home to the UK's first olive grove.Mark's book Veg Patch: River Cottage Handbook Number 4 was named Practical Book of the Year at the Garden Media Guild Awards 2009 and A Taste of the Unexpected won the Guild of Food Writers' Book of the Year 2011.
Growing fruit at home is a delicious and altogether more enjoyable alternative to buying it in the shops. Mark Diacono offers a practical and accessible guide to making the most of your garden and what it has to offer...The key to growing fruit trees and plants successfully is knowing which varieties will thrive in your own particular garden. In the first part of the book, Mark gives straightforward guidelines on techniques like pruning and training, as well as the best time of year to plant and how to deal with problems or pests...The second part is devoted to the different varieties of fruit, with old favourites like apples, cherries, plums, blackcurrants, white currants, redcurrants, strawberries, blueberries, gooseberries, raspberries and rhubarb as well as more exotic species, including figs, grapes, cranberries, Japanese wine berries and apricots...Introduced by Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall and with 30 delicious recipes, full-colour photographs and a directory of useful addresses, this is the ideal reference for any aspiring fruit grower.
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