Posts Tagged ‘Jeff Cox’
The Cook’s Herb Garden by Jeff Cox and Marie-Pierre Moine
As Heard on The Daily Gardener Podcast: The Cook’s Herb Garden by Jeff Cox and Marie-Pierre Moine This book came out in 2010, and the subtitle is Grow Harvest Cook. As someone who loves to grow herbs, this is one of my favorite books on herbs because it features beautiful photography of over 120 culinary herbs.…
Read MoreMarch 23, 2022 John Bartram, 1907 School Garden, James C. Rose, Norman Thelwell, The Cook’s Herb Garden by Jeff Cox and Marie-Pierre Moine, and Elizabeth Taylor
Subscribe Apple | Google | Spotify | Stitcher | iHeart Support The Daily Gardener Buy Me A Coffee Connect for FREE! The Friday Newsletter | Daily Gardener Community Botanical History On This Day 1699 Birth of John Bartram, American botanist and explorer who founded America’s first botanical garden. Linnaeus called him “the greatest natural botanist…
Read MoreNovember 13, 2020 Frederick Lueders, Walter Bartlett, Howard Scott Gentry, Jane Powers, Candace Bushnell, Jeff Cox, P. Allen Smith’s Seasonal Recipes from the Garden, and the 1916 Chrysanthemum Show
Subscribe Apple | Google | Spotify | Stitcher | iHeart Support The Daily Gardener Buy Me A Coffee Connect for FREE! The Friday Newsletter | Daily Gardener Community Curated News Trees Are Time Machines | The Atlantic | Clive Thompson Botanical History On This Day 1843 Frederick Lueders lost three years of botanical collections when…
Read MoreThe Garden is a Love Song
by Jeff Cox A garden is a love song, a duet between a human being and Mother Nature. —Jeff Cox, American garden writer Today’s Garden words were featured on the podcast: Words inspired by the garden are the sweetest, most beautiful words of all. The Garden is a Love Song
Read MoreFirst Snow and the Garden’s Song: Wonder, Renewal, and Nature’s Duet
Today’s Garden Words were featured on The Daily Gardener podcast: Click here to see the complete show notes for this episode. Words inspired by the garden are the sweetest, most beautiful words of all. The first snow in the garden. November 13, 2020 The first snow carries a particular kind of wonder—the kind that rewrites…
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