The Fruit Gardeners Bible
The Fruit Gardeners Bible
A Complete Guide to Growing Fruits and Nuts in the Home Garden
Lewis Hill and Leonard Perry
The mission of Storey Publishing is to serve our customers by publishing practical information that encourages personal independence in harmony with the environment.
Edited by Elizabeth P. Stell and Carleen Madigan
Art direction and book design by Dan O. Williams and Carolyn Eckert
Text production by Liseann Karandisecky and Jennifer Jepson Smith
Front cover photography: from top left: gooseberries Joshua McCullough; strawberries bravo1954/iStockphoto.com; grapes Mark Bolton/GAP Photos Ltd.; blueberries Ewa Brozek/iStockphoto.com; cherry trio Red Helga/iStockphoto. com; pear craftvision/iStockphoto.com; blackberries Jonathan Buckley; currants Valentyn Volkov/iStockphoto. com; apricots house_red/iStockphoto.com; cherries John Glover/GAP Photos Ltd.; almonds Alexandr Tovstenko/iStockphoto.com; plums Jonathan Buckley; raspberries Floortje/iStockphoto.com; peaches Kutay Tanir/iStockphoto. com; loganberries Zara Napier/GAP Photos Ltd.; walnuts Kevin Dyer/iStockphoto.com; apples Jerry Pavia
Back cover and spine photography: pruning Friedrich Strauss/GAP Photos Ltd.; blueberries Tim Gainey/GAP Photos Ltd.; pear Nickos/iStockphoto.com; raspberries Ewa Brozek/iStockphoto.com
Interior photography credits appear on pages 310 and 311
Illustrations by Beverly Duncan
Indexed by Christine R. Lindemer, Boston Road Communications
2011 by Nancy Hill
Portions of this text were originally published under the title Fruits & Berries for the Home Garden, 1992.
Editorial revision by Leonard Perry
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10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Hill, Lewis, 1924
The fruit gardeners bible / Lewis Hill and Leonard Perry.
p. cm.
Includes index.
Previous eds. published as: Fruits and berries for the home garden.
ISBN 978-1-60342-567-4 (pbk.: alk. paper)
ISBN 978-1-60342-984-9 (hardcover: alk. paper)
1. Fruit-culture. I. Perry, Leonard P. II. Title. III. Title: Fruits and berries for the home garden.
SB355.H655 2012
634dc23
2011024870
Contents
Part One
Getting Started with Fruits and Nuts
CHAPTER 1
Fruits and Nuts in the Home Garden
CHAPTER 2
What to Grow and Where
CHAPTER 3
Seasonal Care of Fruits and Nuts
Part Two
The Small Fruits: Berries, Bushes, and Brambles
CHAPTER 4
Strawberries
CHAPTER 5
Raspberries and Blackberries
CHAPTER 6
Blueberries
CHAPTER 7
Ribes, Elderberries, and Other Bush Fruits
CHAPTER 8
Grapes for Every Region
Part Three
Tree Fruits & Nuts
CHAPTER 9
Apples and Crab Apples
CHAPTER 10
Pears
CHAPTER 11
Peaches, Nectarines, and Apricots
CHAPTER 12
Plums for Every Region
CHAPTER 13
Cherries, Sweet and Sour
CHAPTER 14
Nuts
Part Four
Growing Healthy Fruits, Nuts, and Berries
CHAPTER 15
Improving Your Soil
CHAPTER 16
Getting Plants off to a Good Start
CHAPTER 17
Pruning: Not Just for Trees
CHAPTER 18
Diseases, Insects, and Other Fruit Problems
CHAPTER 19
Wildlife Friends and Foes
Acknowledgments
UNTIL ONE IS INVOLVED with writing, or in this case extensively revising, a book of this magnitude, one cannot imagine the number of people who help to make it a reality, to grow mere words into a beautiful and useful gardening reference. I am most thankful to Carleen Madigan for inviting me to undertake this project, and then for providing extra time to make some needed changes. In addition, Im grateful to the reviewers, the artist, the photographers, and the many other production personnel Ive not had the pleasure to meet. Thanks especially to Liz Stell for her patience as we worked on all the details to reorganize the material and create a book even more reader-friendly.
To make this book applicable beyond where I garden, in New England, Im indebted to the many nurseries, specialist growers, and cooperative extension professionals coast to coast and north to south who shared useful information on cultivars and practices for their particular regions. I hope this book has succeeded in tapping into, and accumulating in one place, this wealth of knowledge.
Even with so much new information added to this book, Lewiss voice still rings throughout it. Im grateful for the chance to have known Lewis and Nancy Hill so well, and to have enjoyed good visits and learned much from them over the years. Finally, thanks to my family for giving me up for so many weeks behind the computer.
Leonard Perry
It took me about twenty years to learn
how to grow good fruit. I hope this book will help you accomplish it in less time a whole lot less.Lewis Hill
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