From the nation's foremost historical preservation site comes a guide to traditional--and
still relevant--methods and advice for planting and tending a productive vegetable garden
In a colonial-style garden, the broccoli is purple and "turkey" cucumbers grow to three feet long; oiled
paper predates plastic for sheltering spring plants; and fermenting manure warms the seedlings. Finding
inspiration
and value in 18th-century plants, tools, and techniques, the gardeners
at Colonial Williamsburg have discovered that these traditional
vegetable-growing methods are perfectly at home in today's modern
organic gardens. After all, in the 18th century, organic gardening was
the "only" type of gardening and local produce the only produce
available.
Author Wesley Greene founded the Colonial Garden in
Colonial Williamsburg's Historic Area in 1996. He and his colleagues
have painstakingly researched the ways the colonists planted and tended
their vegetable and herb beds, most of which are more relevant than
ever. Along with historical commentary and complete growing instructions
for 50 delicious vegetables, including colonial varieties still
available today, gardeners and folklorists will find weather-watching
guidelines, planting techniques, and seedsaving advice for legumes,
brassicas, alliums, root crops, nightshades, melons, squash, greens, and
other curious and tender produce.
Request Vegetable Gardening the Colonial Williamsburg Way from the catalog.
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