{"id":1738,"date":"2008-04-13T05:00:52","date_gmt":"2008-04-13T12:00:52","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/getrichslowly.org\/blog\/?p=1738"},"modified":"2019-10-15T21:26:30","modified_gmt":"2019-10-16T04:26:30","slug":"the-bountiful-container-gardening-in-small-spaces","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.getrichslowly.org\/the-bountiful-container-gardening-in-small-spaces\/","title":{"rendered":"The Bountiful Container: Gardening in small spaces"},"content":{"rendered":"

\"\"<\/a>I’ve been gardening for almost fifteen years. I started with flowers, added herbs and vegetables, then a few fruits, then a lot more. I’ve gardened in plots and pots and raised beds. I’ve drooled over bedding plants, spent too much on whatever was my obsession-of-the-moment (bulbs! daylilies! gooseberries! ornamental grasses!), and have certainly read my fair share of plant books and magazines.<\/p>\n

By this time, I’m somewhat jaded about most gardening educational materials \u2014 I find they are often at one extreme or another: either an all-around reference that is about as exciting to read as The Merck Index<\/a>, or beautiful but vapid plant-porn packed with color photos of planting schemes and “outdoor rooms” that can only be reproduced in Southern California!<\/p>\n

However, I give a rave review \u2014 and two green<\/span> thumbs up \u2014 to a recent find on container gardening: The Bountiful Container<\/i><\/b><\/a> by Rose Marie Nichols McGee and Maggie Stuckey (2002). This book was suggested last spring by a reader named Beth in J.D.’s overview of square-foot gardening<\/a>. It will find a permanent place on my gardening reference shelf, despite the fact that I don’t plan to grow anything new in a container in the foreseeable future. (Although this book just may have changed my mind.)<\/p>\n

A Great Gardening Book
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The Bountiful Container<\/i> beats most gardening books hands-down in several key areas:<\/p>\n