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The new Square Foot Garden
If you’re gardening using
the method first described by Mel Bartholomew in his 1981 bestseller, “Square
Foot Gardening,” you’re
still using his timeless formula of more garden in a smaller space with
less work. But Bartholomew calls that book the Model T, whereas his revised “All
New Square Foot Gardening,” published in 2006, is “the latest
Cadillac.” More than a routine tune-up, the revised version is
a significant overhaul designed to make gardening even easier. The new
square-foot garden is still a 4-by-4-foot grid divided into 12-inch squares,
but the planting area is “up, not down”—a raised bed
in which the gardener grows vegetables and flowers in as little as 6
inches of prepared soil. Once the bed is filled with Bartholomew’s
recommended soil recipe—a blend of peat moss, vermiculite and compost—no
fertilizer is necessary, he says. The new book is slicker then the original,
with color photographs and graphics, sprinkled liberally with side notes
like “Penny Pinchers” and “Kid’s Corner.” It
includes growing guidelines for 25 popular fruits and vegetables, from
corn and beans to strawberries and melons. The instructions include botanical,
cultivation and harvesting information. Though diseases and pests are
listed for each plant, there is no specific information on control or
prevention of problems. Whether or not you follow Bartholomew’s
gardening advice to the letter, there’s plenty worth pondering
in his books, old or new.
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