We're sorry. An error has occurred
Please cancel or retry.
Cool Plants for Cold Climates
Some error occured while loading the Quick View. Please close the Quick View and try reloading the page.
Couldn't load pickup availability
- Format:
-
15 July 2017

When Adams moved from the warm Southwest to Alaska, she found herself in a different gardening world, with few guides on how to approach this new ecosystem. Now, more than twenty-five years later, she shares the secrets gained from her years of gardening experiments as well as bountiful advice from friends and local nurseries. She explains how to evaluate a plant, balancing its artistic attributes with its more utilitarian ones, as well as how to evaluate your space and soil. Adams then takes you into the nursery, offering guidance on how to pick the best of the best. Finally, she offers a detailed look at a wide variety of wonderful plants, highlighting those that offer overall beauty, are especially easy to care for, and solidly hardy. With more than three hundred vivid pictures of both individual plants and full gardens, Adams proves that there is a bounty of plants, in a rainbow of colors, waiting to brighten up your space.
— GWA Media Award
“Adams’ new book is useful to cold climate gardeners everywhere -- across Canada and all those northern fl y-over states to New England, Northern Europe and, probably, Outer Mongolia. . . . What lifts this book above other decent advice books is the hundred or so pages of recommended plants with stunning photographs showing them in a variety of groupings illustrating how individual choices fit together. Maybe it‛s the four feet of snow piled in my yard, or the single-digit temperatures every night into late March, but Adams‛ practical advice about both familiar and unfamiliar plants—and the photo illustrations—had me redesigning my garden in my imagination, over and over.”
— Sheila Toomey
— Richard Hawke, plant evaluation manager, Chicago Botanic Garden
— Julie Riley, horticulturist, University of Alaska Fairbanks
— Patricia Holloway, professor emeritus, horticulture, University of Alaska Fairbanks
— Stephanie Cohen, author of The Perennial Gardener's Design Primer and Fallscaping