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If you want to keep Bambi from eating your garden, then keep reading. Are you tired of looking out your kitchen window and seeing deer munch on your garden? Do they think your garden is their own personal salad bar? Do deer and even rabbits wreck what they don't eat, so your garden looks like a tornado hit? In this book, you will discover: Various methods to protect your garden from deer and other four-legged nuisances Which plants deer find unappealing and why What plants are best for your soil type How much sun each plant requires When each plant blooms and what color the flowers are Which…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
If you want to keep Bambi from eating your garden, then keep reading. Are you tired of looking out your kitchen window and seeing deer munch on your garden? Do they think your garden is their own personal salad bar? Do deer and even rabbits wreck what they don't eat, so your garden looks like a tornado hit? In this book, you will discover: Various methods to protect your garden from deer and other four-legged nuisances Which plants deer find unappealing and why What plants are best for your soil type How much sun each plant requires When each plant blooms and what color the flowers are Which plants are susceptible to pests Height and spread range of each plant How to plan your garden to make it unappetizing to deer but still beautiful and nutritious for you and your family This Spring Planting Edition will tell you what you need to know for flowering and non-flowering plants generally started in the spring. The friendly neighborhood deer will find your yard too much trouble or not very appetizing and decide to visit your neighbor's yard instead. So simple, even someone who has never had a garden before can do it! Special Bonus Section will list plants repellent to rabbits!
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Autorenporträt
Sue Monson started gardening when she was ten years old. She was recovering from a long illness and her mother wanted her to get outside and not stay in her room (she was a bookworm). So, they planted some pumpkin seeds and watched the plant grow. The day before she was going to bring the pumpkin in and ask her mom to make a pie out of it, a neighborhood cat ate some of it. Since then, she has been aware of the competition between humans and other animals for the garden harvest. Sue worked for many years as an optical engineer, researching medical instruments, military inspection equipment, fiber optics, and lasers. She gardens to relieve stress and also plays flute and piano. She lives outside Chicago.