Designing and Maintaining Your Edible Landscape Naturally


Roots Demystified, explains simple solutions about growing healthy roots and, thereby, healthier plants. The book explores the subterranean part of every gardener’s world, revealing how roots really grow while dispelling myths such as where most gardeners apply water, mulch, and fertilizer or compost. This is the first and only book in print for gardeners with such an extensive number of illustrations of garden and orchard roots. The roots covered are: lawns, pra… More >>

Designing and Maintaining Your Edible Landscape Naturally

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5 comments

  1. M. Andrews says:

    I am an experienced gardener but I never fail to learn something new when I pick up this book. I have had my copy for over fifteen years but still find the information current. This book is a must for anyone who has every wanted to grow an edible garden. From cover crops to choosing apple tree varieties it’s packed full of information. I only wish the author would write another similar book so I could buy it. I own most of the books written about edible landscaping and can say this is by far the best.
    Rating: 5 / 5

  2. A. Halpin says:

    This insightful and instructive book is full of surprising information–it’s incredibly useful. Understanding how roots grow is key to successful gardening, and a lot of what I thought I knew about them (such as that most of a tree’s roots lie below its canopy) was wrong. Kourik debunks a lot of myths, and his clear, easy to read text is loaded with interesting bits of information on growing all sorts of plants. This book is a valuable addition to my library, and I’ll consult it often. I’m a lifelong gardener, and I learned a lot!
    Rating: 5 / 5

  3. M. Roberts says:

    This book is supposed to be Roots Demystified: Changing Your Gardening Habits to Help Roots Thrive, but much of the info on this page is about another of Kourik’s books: on Edible Landscaping. I hope they get this corrected very soon. Kourik’s new book on Roots is amazing and very valuable – let’s hope Amazon can get it right! Meanwhile, google the authors name and the book title and find it on his web site.
    Rating: 5 / 5

  4. Gardening expert Robert Kourik is the author of ten books addressing topics that have ranged from drip irrigation, environmentally-sound homes, edible landscaping, and lavender. Now he turns his attention to the necessity of health roots (and thereby healthy plants) for successful gardening and agriculture. Superbly written and thoroughly ‘user friendly’, “Roots Demystified” is profusely enhanced with twenty-five illustrative graphics showcasing extraordinary illustrations of excavated root systems in their entirety. A compendium of practical, comprehensive, and exceptionally well organized information, advice, tips, and observations that will benefit novice gardeners and seasoned professionals alike, “Roots Demystified” is an excellent and strongly recommended addition to personal, professional, academic, and community library Gardening/Agriculture/Horticulture reference collections and supplemental reading lists.
    Rating: 5 / 5

  5. Roots Demystified: Change Your Gardening Habits to Help Roots Thrive, by Robert Kourik.

    A good introductory book to the growth of tree, shrub, and plant roots. Has some material on other things that grow in the soil that interact with roots, and some basic soil science, including a brief chapter on fungus and symbiotic relationships. There are sections on vegetables, shrubs, and trees, how their roots grow and differ, with good planting and care advice. If you have other books with sections on roots, there is little new here. If not, it is a good book to start with. It has a good reference section of current books that we can actually purchase or borrow.

    I have read the book, and thumbed through it several times more, and I am still not sure what the author’s recommendation for changing my gardening habits to is, there does not seem to be a conclusion or summary. I think, I may be wrong, that he recommends double digging if the soil is poor or compacted, then move on to compost, mulch, and shallow tilling only.

    The book is recommended by John Jevons, the “Grow Biointensive” double digging proponent, and it often mentions Ruth Stout, the no dig no work gardening advocate of thick mulching. He draws on the work of John Weaver in the 1920’s and 30’s, which is good, as Weaver’s books are not readily available.

    All in all a good book, easy to read presented with a dry sense of humor, solid information, a book I may go back to read again for inspiration, and a bit of reference.

    Rating: 4 / 5