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The Rural Voice, 2004-12, Page 44Rhea Hamilton - Seeger and her husband live near Auburn. She is a skilled cook and gardener. By Rhea Hamilton -Seeger A lot of gardeners tend to pull out the gardening books over the winter. If you can't get out there and dig then you might as well think, plan and dream about it. I decided to take a peek on-line to see what was new on a few book lists. Browsing on-line is a bit like getting lost in a massive department store. Yes there are signs to guide you but, my goodness, there are some turns you wish you just hadn't made. I got to a site and clicked on garden plants and tools. Up came a selection of new books. The Big Book of Buds Volume 2 caught my eye and I clicked on it for a better view. I have to tell you that for the past few years I have helped out a Hensall group with their plant sale. It is a fundraiser for a great community cause. My biggest challenge is identifying wee plants that are dug up as soon as the snow has melted off and exposed them. Some are a bit difficult to recognize but we get them named. I think a great project would be a book with coloured pictures of young plants beside that of the adult plant. First leaves are never like mature leaves and some young leaves are just downright deceptive. So I had this in mind when I clicked on the Buds book. I was more than a little disappointed to find out that Buds was all about marijuana. The sub heading was: More marijuana varieties from the world's greatest seed breeders. So I guess my idea for an identification book of wee plants is still possible. But for the rest of my book search Buds was listed on the side of my computer screen as if to entice me to buy it. I decided to do a search for books about a broader issue and typed in the 40 THE RURAL VOICE Gardening Reading for the winter key word environment. Among 10 pages of book titles only a handful were concerned with the natural environment. The rest covered such broad topics as business and law environment, International law and the environment, spiritually fulfilling environment, sustainable work environment, creating a safe environment for school age children and eliminating allergies in your environment. So I settled on checking out our local book store and had much better luck and I had a chance to take a good look at the books themselves. Knowing what is out there is now the big challenge. New gardeners are catching onto clues as to what plants will do best in their gardens and look for these clues in their books. Steve Whysall has written 100 Best Plants for the Ontario Garden, The Botanical Bones of Great Gardening. Lots of valuable information and a layout that features a quick guide on each plant similar to what you would see on a plant tag: mature size, growing conditions, flowering time and most importantly what climate zone. In a more detailed writeup, Whysall covers the where and how to plant as well as suggestions for companion plants. And yes there are Latin tags. There are coloured plates of each plant grouped in the centre of the book making it more economical to produce and the savings are passed on to you. The book retails for about $20 If you are looking for an all- encompassing encyclopedia of plants then the people at DK Books have that covered. The original version covered the United States and, not to miss a good market, this volume is directed at Canada. A -Z Encyclopedia of Garden Plants by Christopher Brickell and Trevor Cole features coloured pictures and a full inventory of plants for your garden, that includes trees, shrubs, vines, perennials, bulbs, and annuals. Complete descriptions make it easy to plot out new plants and determine just what will grow in your garden before investing in the actual plants. It retails for a hefty $95 but is well worth the investment. If you are looking for something more simple and Tess expensive, look up Great Canadian Plant Guide. 3000 Plants Recommended. Edited by Trevor Cole and published by DK Books it offers a smaller, narrower list of plants. Describing these books as lists of plants just does not do them justice. There is a wealth of information offered from soil conditions to sections on troubleshooting when things go wrong. How much information do you want at your fingertips is the question. I always look first to make sure the book I choose is developed with Canadian gardeners in mind. The English and American books are beautiful and 1 must admit my practicality can be swept away with a few beautiful shots of desirable gardens. Which is probably why I am a sucker for British garden magazines. There are two more books that should be in your library. The first is How to get your Lawn and Garden off Drugs, A Basic Guide to Pesticide -Free Gardening in North America. Written by Carole Rubin with foreword by Robert Bateman, it is a handy little book that covers everything from pesticide myths and how pesticides work, to the ABCs of soil preparation and how to choose appropriate pest -resistant lawn grasses. There is an interesting section on why organic potion -based pesticides are still not the answer. I learn something new every day. The people at Reader's Digest are pretty clever. Among the hundreds of new titles they produce each year I think there is at least one gardener's problem -solver produced too. Some are written by one author and others by a list of contributors. My first problem -solver book was actually a two -volume set put together by the American Garden Guild and published by Doubleday. It is pages upon pages of questions sorted into sections but not the easiest book to j�l