The Midwest Native Plant Primer is a gardening guide
with herbal encyclopedia covering a plethora of indigenous plant species
for gardeners in the midwestern USA. Due out 21st July 2020 from
Timber Press, it's 256 pages and will be available in paperback and
ebook formats.
As we learn more about the interconnectedness of local biomes and the
desirability of supporting indigenous pollinators, plant, and animal
species, more gardeners are moving to reduce or eliminate potentially
invasive species and substitute with native species. This is a regional
guide aimed at the midwestern USA and includes a huge variety of
native plant species and their uses in the garden.
I liked the layout of the book which was very well organized and easy to
follow. The introduction provides a good overview of native plants, why
they're desirable for habitat and food for local species, how the
choice of these species for our gardens actually benefits us as
gardeners (less maintenance, suited to the climate and growing
conditions already, hardiness), and more.
The plant primer itself takes up the majority of the page content and is split
into plant types: native plants, trees, shrubs, groundcovers, perennials and vines. Each of the primer entries
contains the botanical and some common names for the plant, habitat/soil
conditions and culture requirements, active growing seasons and other
special info, size, light requirements, a good description, and a clear
picture. There are 225 species contained, enough to provide lots of
alternatives for almost any garden role.The end of the book contains
appendices which include a hardiness and climate chart, bibliography,
good resources list, and index.
This is one of the better regional gardening guides which I've reviewed. Five stars.
Disclosure: I received an ARC at no cost from the author/publisher for review purposes.
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