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Rating:  Summary: You'll love this book! Review: Although I am a mere "weekend, small-patch" kind of gardener, I have found that "Hot Plants for Cool Climates" is as wonderful to own as some of my favorite cookbooks. The stories accompanying each plant description feed the imagination of a gardener as do ingredients in a recipe. Informative in its scope yet poetic in its breadth, this book is a delight to the heart as well as to the eye. This book makes it delicious to dream of someday tending a much larger garden, and it provides the reader with not only the creative inspiration, but also the tools of knowledge with which to plant a tropical paradise that can thrive in a temperate reality.
Rating:  Summary: Buy this book.... Review: Although I am a mere "weekend, small-patch" kind of gardener, I have found that "Hot Plants for Cool Climates" is as wonderful to own as some of my favorite cookbooks. The stories accompanying each plant description feed the imagination of a gardener as do ingredients in a recipe. Informative in its scope yet poetic in its breadth, this book is a delight to the heart as well as to the eye. This book makes it delicious to dream of someday tending a much larger garden, and it provides the reader with not only the creative inspiration, but also the tools of knowledge with which to plant a tropical paradise that can thrive in a temperate reality.
Rating:  Summary: An excellent resource Review: As a professional horticulturist gardening in zones 5 through 7, I have searched high and low for a good reference book on tropical and subtropical plants. At last I have found it!Hot Plants for Cool Climates is informative, interesting and well-organized. The design suggestions are new and exciting, and the encyclopedia is stuffed with detailed information regarding cultivation. Particularly helpful were the cultivar names listed under each species (god help me, how did they ever whittle down the list under Coleus?) and the overwintering tips. Serious amateurs and professionals alike will benefit from owning this book.
Rating:  Summary: An excellent resource Review: As a professional horticulturist gardening in zones 5 through 7, I have searched high and low for a good reference book on tropical and subtropical plants. At last I have found it! Hot Plants for Cool Climates is informative, interesting and well-organized. The design suggestions are new and exciting, and the encyclopedia is stuffed with detailed information regarding cultivation. Particularly helpful were the cultivar names listed under each species (god help me, how did they ever whittle down the list under Coleus?) and the overwintering tips. Serious amateurs and professionals alike will benefit from owning this book.
Rating:  Summary: An informative good read Review: Hot Plants for Cool Climates is a very informative book, with all the new and unusual plants hitting the market these days it makes a great reference. The chapters on design, containers and overwintering are especially informative. I garden on a small terrace where everything has to be in containers and look great all summer, tropicals really work wonderfully in this situation. I can't wait to try some new and exciting plants this year!
Rating:  Summary: Hot Ideas in Hot Plants Review: Simply put, this book is the most exciting, helpful and practical book I have seen in quite a while when it comes to ideas about innovative approaches to gardening in cool climates. It is a treasure chest of ideas on the cutting edge of what's happening. If you are into geraniums and other pedestrian plant material, look elsewhere. If you are curious about what's new, hot and exciting, this book is for you. The photos are dazzling and the narrative is so well written, even an amateur like myself felt totally comfortable. This book has already become my gift of choice for friends and family who care about their gardens.
Rating:  Summary: An informative good read Review: The book is composed of 2 sections. The first section is 98 pages about the tropical environment, garden design, and garden structures. 18 pages about plants in the tropics. 32 pages on garden design and style. 16 pages on containers. 19 pages on random observations about tropical, and tropical looking, plants. 13 pages about overwintering tropicals. This section also includes about 90 photographs. Photos appear rather dull and faded, not high quality printing. Most images are also rather small. The second section contains a 95 page tropical plant encyclopedia, 11 page plant list for different environments, 3 page plant nursery list, and an 11 page index. The encyclopedia describes 101 plants giving common name, scientific name, native growing zone, gardening tips, and typical cultivars. Each description includes a small photograph of the plant. Information in the first section is mostly fluff. Long wandering sentences that lead nowhere. This is supplemented by the same old garden design stuff that you can find in many other books. My first impression when I put the book down was that this was a book written in the 1950s. Nothing special. The second section is the encyclopedia, and while nearly one full page is written about each plant - little is said. Garden advice is weak, no specifics are given. Most plant tags contain more real information. The only bright spot is a brief chapter on overwintering tropicals. This chapter becomes modestly interesting, but ends way too soon. Overall, the book is a disappointment. Small snippets of important information are scattered amongst the text, but mostly it just rambles along. It a nice book to buy as a holiday present for that relative you've never been real fond of :-)
Rating:  Summary: a bit disappointing Review: The photographs are enticing and the advice for garden design and plant combining is useful, but apart from some tips about winterizing subtropicals, I found the book's horticultural advice and information a bit skimpy and sometimes doubtful or vague. We learn that Heliconias need to be kept warm during the winter, but no specific temperature range is provided. Hibiscus are described as ideal houseplants--a claim that should raise a few more experienced eyebrows (and some eager head nodding and salivating from hordes of overwintering scales and white flies). All phormiums are pronounced as suffering in heat and humidity, but Tony Avent in sticky hot Carolina manages well enough with several cultivars. Bougainvillia Raspberry Ice is described as one of the best cultivars, when it is actually a notoriously shy bloomer. Often I felt like what we had here was, in place of hard core research and experience some enthusiastic skimming of various plant catalogues (in fact, some, like the Stokes catalogue might actually be more informative). But at the same time, I do think the design aspects of the book are good and it inspires me with a thousand plans for next year and beyond.
Rating:  Summary: Chicago Bananas and pineapples Review: Tropical gardening here in the the Midwest has been a passion of mine for over 20 years. I never thought of it as different just big annuals. Thats what I liked about Susan's and Dennis's approach to this book. It was really laid back there just plants was the feeling I was getting from reading this book. They didn't make it complicated. I liked the real expectations they had in the book no hype about growing you own table ready bananas in Maine or something crazy like that just pure and simple you are growing them for the foliage effect don't get carried away. Bananas are just big cannas and brumansias are really big coleus they put it simple and gave great advice and the garden shots are great a real inspiration. The over wintering section was worth the price of the book.
Rating:  Summary: If only the content lived up to the title! Review: When I first saw the title of this book, I thought it was exactly what I was looking for. But that turned out to be because conceptual accuracy was sacrificed for verbal cleverness on the cover. The book has little to do with gardening in temperate zones (horticulturally understood to be climates free from extremes of heat or cold), or cool climates (horticulturaly understood to mean climates with heat-deprived summers). To the contrary, the book presumes that the gardener lives where there is a significant season of sustained heat, during which time plants will quickly establish themselves from plant-and-pull frost protection measures or regenerate as root-hardy returning perennials. The book is aimed at gardeners in the East; West Coast gardeners will probably be happier with books that advocate attaining the "tropical look" with plants that feature year-round outdoor hardiness and don't require summer heat to perform well.
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