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ENTRY  #  THIRTEEN  HUNDRED  &  EIGHTY  FOUR


Ray White with computer

By ERIC SHACKLE, in Sydney, Australia
 

Good  Morning.

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Tomato Burpee Bunch Hybrid
Picture by Burpee.

 Holiday Book Recommendations for Tomato Gardeners: Part II

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$64 TomatoBy Michelle Fabio

As the holiday season creeps up on us, you may be looking for the perfect gift for the tomato gardener in your life. There are plenty of books out there on how to garden and we told you about them in Part I, but here are three books written for gardeners by gardeners with firsthand tales of their tomato trials and tribulations:

The $64 Tomato: How One Man Nearly Lost His Sanity, Spent a Fortune, and Endured an Existential Crisis in the Quest for the Perfect Garden by William Alexander

Lauded by Publishers Weekly as a “hilarious horticultural memoir,” The $64 Tomato recounts Alexander’s experience with growing a vegetable garden and orchard in the Hudson Valley. As a telling example of how things went for Alexander, he begins his journey organically-obsessed but ends up covering his entire propertyin pesticides when he finds himself in a battle against just about everything he comes across.

Your favorite tomato gardener may just find solace in Alexander’s own troubles—and humor dealing with them.

Blithe Tomato by Mike Madison

Madison is a subsistence farmer in California with more than 20 years experience in the local farmers’ market scene. Blithe Tomato is a collection of essays on Madison’s experiences. Although some readers were distracted by Madison’s expressions about politics, Publishers Weekly states that:

“Redemption lies in essays about aspects inherent to the life of a small farmer: a love of nature, a sense of pleasure in one’s work and an intrinsic connection to the earth and all living things.”

For those who believe in eating fresh and local, this book could be a perfect choice.

It’s a Long Road to a Tomato: Tales of an Organic Farmer Who Quit the Big City for the (Not So) Simple Life by Keith Stewart

Keith Stewart is a staple at New York City’s Union Square Greenmarket, but his life didn’t start out on the tomato-growing path. Two decades ago, Stewart was a corporate executive who decided to leave the city for farm-living in Orange County,NY. Now Stewart is famous for some of his special crops, including heirloom tomatoes.

In It’s a Long Road to a Tomato, Stewart shares his feelings, knowledge, philosophy, and humor in a series of essays that could inspire anyone to pursue a life-changing decision—especially if it involves tomatoes.

 

Tomatomania Hits Southern California

Top 5 Signs You’re Obsessed with Tomatoes - TomatoCasual.comBy Michelle Fabio

Tomatomania, the world’s largest tomato seedling sale, kicked off the weekend of March 29-30 in Encinitas, California.

What started out as a once-a-year event 18 years ago has now stretched into a 6-week affair with stops in Encino, Sonoma, Beverly Hills, Arcadia, and even an East Coast trip to Litchfield, Connecticut.

This seed-buying event has consistently offered tomato connoisseurs Read the rest of this entry »

 

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Click on link above to go back to the top. Thanks for coming on down .Dad

BYE  BYE      DAD.

Sending my love to all of you.

If all is well I hope to see you  in the early   morning.



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This entry has 1 comments: (Add your own)
  • #1 Comment from jmuhjacat 
    4/3/08 4:40 PM Permalink
    That's a great new picture of you in your office, Dad -- gee, you have a lot of icons on your desktop!  And that is a wonderful Thought For The Day (as always!).  Your weather looks about like our weather today -- nice for a change, yes?  And the eagle and falcons look well -- have you checked on those falcons?

    Gosh, who woulda thunk there'd be so many obstacles to growing the perfect tomato?  Here's wishing you no curling yellow leaf, this season or ever!

    Best to you all, and big PURRS to the Princess beauty! ^^