cover image The Healthy Vegetable Garden: A Natural, Chemical-Free Approach to Soil, Biodiversity and Managing Pests and Diseases

The Healthy Vegetable Garden: A Natural, Chemical-Free Approach to Soil, Biodiversity and Managing Pests and Diseases

Sally Morgan. Chelsea Green, $29.95 trade paper (224p) ISBN 978-1-64502-064-6

“There are no short cuts when you are trying to create a healthy garden,” cautions Organic Farming editor Morgan (The Climate Change Garden) in this comprehensive look at Earth-healthy gardening. Focusing on regenerative gardening practices that eschew weedkillers and pesticides and instead enrich gardens with organic matter, Morgan begins with soil, which, she writes, needs a diversity of organisms “from bacteria and fungi through to nematodes and earthworms.” Improving soil requires not disturbing the soil’s “food web” and making use of livestock manure. Second to soil maintenance is understanding pests and predators, and the ways bugs—from sapsuckers to defoliators—attack plants. “The key to keeping pests and diseases under control is observation,” Morgan writes. “Beneficials” such as spiders, beetles, wasps, and even hedgehogs, make their homes in gardens, and Morgan shows readers how to use the good ones to help keep the ones that do damage to a garden in check: provide desirable predators with “bug hotels” to keep them returning to fight the enemy. Rounding things out is an A–Z index of pests and diseases that makes for easy reference. Morgan’s detailed advice will be a boon to climate-minded gardeners. (Sept.)