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Garden Allies

The Insects, Birds, and Other Animals That Keep Your Garden Beautiful and Thriving

ebook
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 4 weeks
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 4 weeks

"Explains how your garden can be a thriving, balanced community that gives more to your landscape than it takes." —Douglas W. Tallamy, author of The Nature of Oaks and Nature’s Best Hope
The birds, mammals, reptiles, and insects that inhabit our yards and gardens are overwhelmingly on our side—they are not our enemies, but instead our allies. They pollinate our flowers and vegetable crops, and they keep pests in check. In Garden Allies, Frédérique Lavoipierre shares fascinating portraits of these creatures, describing their life cycles and showing how they keep the garden’s ecology in balance. Also included is helpful information on how to nurture and welcome these valuable creatures into your garden. With beautiful pen-and-ink drawings by Craig Latker, Garden Allies invites you to make friends with the creatures that fill your garden—the reward is a renewed sense of nature’s beauty and a garden humming with life.

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  • Reviews

    • Publisher's Weekly

      April 19, 2021
      Lavoipierre, former director of education at Santa Barbara Botanic Garden, focuses on “the pollinators, decomposers, and other organisms that are part of any thriving garden” in her impassioned and informative debut. Instead of viewing such creatures as enemies or pests, Lavoipierre encourages gardeners to accept them as part of the ecosystem and offers advice for creating an “ally-friendly” garden. She helps readers distinguish “good bugs” from “bad bugs” (“pests” are destructive, while pollinators are helpful) and offers information about earthworms, roly-polys, bees, and beetles. Fun facts abound: “over one-fifth of all living species on earth are beetles,” ambush bugs can capture prey over 10 times their size, and centipedes have odd-numbered feet and never 100 of them, despite their name. She also offers tips for plants that will help gardeners protect and care for butterflies, birds, and bats. Her accessible information comes with humor (Ichneumonid wasps are “not icky at all”), and her plea that gardeners appreciate the critters in their soil rings true: “it’s high time,” she writes, “to find new ways to garden and to contribute to the long-term sustainability of our human-managed landscapes.” Gardeners will walk away from this spirited advice finding creepy crawlers at least a bit more charming.

    • Booklist

      July 1, 2021
      Author of the decade-long series "Garden Allies" for Pacific Horticulture magazine, and former director of education for the Santa Barbara Botanic Garden, Lavoipierre brings considerable expertise and detail to the nurturing of important garden allies, ranging from soil microorganisms to bees, butterflies, beetles, spiders, and even vertebrates. Her wise mantra: "I generally don't think of bugs as good or bad. Instead I have learned to think of them in their ecological roles: as prey and predators, pollinators, decomposers, and so on." And so for earthworms, say, she explains how they accelerate soil decomposition and create "castings" that improve soil nutrition while pointing out critical differences between native and non-native species, and ending with specifics like popular names, scientific names, distribution, and garden activities. All in all, an excellent resource for any gardener willing to press pause before turning to the pesticide.

      COPYRIGHT(2021) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Library Journal

      August 13, 2021

      Lavoipierre (former director of education at Santa Barbara Botanic Garden) aims to help readers understand "common garden characters...what they do and why," from bugs to birds. Without getting political, the text explains how to create a beautiful garden that makes the least environmental impact, how to intervene (if at all) when critters and insects appear, and how to contribute to the "long term stability of our...landscape." The idea isn't to fear the creatures in the garden or dismiss them as pests, but to learn more about them. Chapters include "Life Beneath Our Feet"; "Digging Deeper"; "Meet the Beetles"; "The Ground Crew"; and "High and Low: Birds, Bats, and Other Vertebrates." Other features are a number of black-and-white illustrations, a metric-to-U.S. conversion chart, a three-page glossary explaining terms in plain English, and a detailed index. The Resource List is full of beneficial information from websites, books, and films. VERDICT A useful and interesting read for rookie, armchair, and experienced gardeners. Easy to read front to back or section by section, and information can be applied to any region of the United States.--Beth Bland, Milwaukee

      Copyright 2021 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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  • English

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