Cheap The English Garden (Magazine) Price
CHEAP-PRICE.NET ’s Cheap Price
$32.75
Here at Cheap-price.net we have The English Garden at a terrific price. The real-time price may actually be cheaper — click “Buy Now” above to check the live price at Amazon.com.
| CATEGORY: | Magazine |
| MANUFACTURER: | Evergreen Marketing |
| FEATURES: | Magazine Subscription |
| TYPE: | Gardening, Hobbies and Special Inter, Home & Garden, House & Home, Plant Culture |
| MEDIA: | Magazine |
Related Products
Customer Reviews of The English Garden
gloriously beautiful magazine I've been a subscriber for a few years, and always eagerly devour the issue from cover to cover. It sends me back to England every other month, and for the hour or two that it takes me to read it, I couldn't be happier. Sometimes I find wonderful gardening information that applies to my small, urban CA garden, but the beautifully written articles and glorious color photographs would keep me enthralled anyway. Don't be put off by the review posted that said there was no way to reach anyone about a missing subscription. First, given that it is only published every other month, and the delay in getting things back and forth over the Atlantic, it isn't too surprising that there could be a few month delay in beginning a new subscription. But there IS a phone number (...) and email address (...) for their US distributor, The British Connection, which also handles their sister publication, The English Home. I started with the gardening magazine and added the home one about a year later, and I love it just as much. I feel like I've given myself a very special treat whenever one arrives in the mail box, and I've never had a problem with either subscription. Give it a try, they are very special, unique publications! What a lovely gift!
Jasmine, peacocks, bluebells
This bimonthly magazine is a wish book for those of us who don't have two full-time gardeners on staff, or a few acres of woods to devote to bluebells, or the ruins of an ancient abbey to train roses against. My Regency ancestors were breaking their backs on hardscrabble New England farms, rather than building follies or planting mazes, or having their grounds landscaped by Capability Brown.
<
>
<
>Oh, but what if....
<
>
<
>I've subscribed to "The English Garden" for many years now, and I don't think I've ever gotten anything useful out of it, but the gardens photographed within its glossy pages are to dream for: acres of blooming rhododendrons; statuesque old sequoias that were planted when Victoria was queen; lavender hedges; outdoor rooms that have been replanted to a 17th century plan; a sundial pool; and of course, a bluebell wood.
<
>
<
>There are plenty of suggestions for the serious gardener. For example, the current issue (July 2005) features the following:
<
>
<
>* For year round colour, buy a couple of peacocks. Their screams will also scare away the burglars
<
>
<
>* One gentleman favors beer for slugs, "Although I don't dare use it here - the gardeners would drink it!"
<
>
<
>* Hazel twigs bent over beds and urns will deter the peacocks
<
>
<
>* Add a touch of history to your garden with an Italian carved white marble seat. It can be picked up at Sotheby's Garden Statuary sale for a mere 25,000 - 40,000 pounds. (I absolutely lust for this bench, but alas my pension must be spent elsewhere)
<
>
<
>* "Use perfumed plants in the conservatory because the warmth generated by the glass pumps fragrance through the house"
<
>
<
>* Plant marigolds in your walled kitchen garden to keep "eelworm and whitefly at bay"
<
>
<
>* Flank the path to the summerhouse with rhododendrons and white narcissi
<
>
<
>* To break up a long path, use arches "lightly clothed with jasmine or clematis"
<
>
<
>If some of the above tips are a bit too steep for your pocketbook, you can do like me and drool over the marvelous photographs of someone else's jasmine arch and Italian carved marble.
<
>
Maybe a good magazine - if you can get it
I subscribed in Sept 04 and still have not received any single issue (as of Jan 05). There is no phone number or email address, so the only way to contact them is by mail, only they don't respond. They took my money, and I never heard from them again.
<
>
<
>Finally I had enough and subscribed to Garden Gate Magazine instead. They are prompt and efficient, and the magazine is great.