U bekijkt momenteel de Netherlands versie van de site.
Wilt u overschakelen naar uw lokale site?
Laatste editie


Free Sample Issue
Probeer een Gratis monster van Home Farmer Magazine
Probeer een Gratis monster

Home Farmer Magazine September 2016 Vorige editie

English
2 Beoordelingen   •  English   •   Family & Home (Gardening)
This month Home Farmer welcomes organic gardener, author and broadcaster, Charles Dowding, to our team of knowledgeable contributors, and he begins with a timely feature on preparing for early cropping next year. As all good gardeners know, it’s in autumn that much of the real work for next year’s early harvests is done, with soil preparation, and sowing and planting of veg that will often lie dormant, once established, over the winter period to get off to a flying start as the days lengthen and the temperatures warm up in spring. We also have sound advice from Helen Babbs on growing grapes in a corner of the polytunnel and up along the roof space, Sue Stickland juggling summer harvests and autumn planting under cover, John Harrison on seed-saving and 5-star compost, Sally Morgan on growing edible hedges and perennials, and Gaby Bartai on making the most of tomato and pepper gluts, with good advice on controlling any future excesses. We have three different views of smallholding too – one from a person who managed to grab a slice of the good life, one from an experienced smallholder who runs courses, and one from regular contributor, Dot Tyne, who simply describes each day as it is in her popular smallholder diary slot. We also feature bees, chickens, Danish pastries, laver bread (and other seaweed delights), green tomato cake and rose-hips. And on a more general level we have a feature on no-till agriculture, a growing movement which regards regular ploughing techniques as highly damaging to our soil structure, and Archers agricultural editor, Graham Harvey, who makes a very strong case for a return to mixed farms and pasture-fed livestock as a way of replacing the chemicals and immense machinery which agri-business has decided we need – or rather they need us to need; it’s crucial reading for anyone concerned about the state of our countryside and the food we eat today.
read more read less
Home Farmer Magazine Preview Pages Home Farmer Magazine Preview Pages Home Farmer Magazine Preview Pages Home Farmer Magazine Preview Pages Home Farmer Magazine Preview Pages Home Farmer Magazine Preview Pages Home Farmer Magazine Preview Pages Home Farmer Magazine Preview Pages

Home Farmer Magazine

September 2016 This month Home Farmer welcomes organic gardener, author and broadcaster, Charles Dowding, to our team of knowledgeable contributors, and he begins with a timely feature on preparing for early cropping next year. As all good gardeners know, it’s in autumn that much of the real work for next year’s early harvests is done, with soil preparation, and sowing and planting of veg that will often lie dormant, once established, over the winter period to get off to a flying start as the days lengthen and the temperatures warm up in spring. We also have sound advice from Helen Babbs on growing grapes in a corner of the polytunnel and up along the roof space, Sue Stickland juggling summer harvests and autumn planting under cover, John Harrison on seed-saving and 5-star compost, Sally Morgan on growing edible hedges and perennials, and Gaby Bartai on making the most of tomato and pepper gluts, with good advice on controlling any future excesses. We have three different views of smallholding too – one from a person who managed to grab a slice of the good life, one from an experienced smallholder who runs courses, and one from regular contributor, Dot Tyne, who simply describes each day as it is in her popular smallholder diary slot. We also feature bees, chickens, Danish pastries, laver bread (and other seaweed delights), green tomato cake and rose-hips. And on a more general level we have a feature on no-till agriculture, a growing movement which regards regular ploughing techniques as highly damaging to our soil structure, and Archers agricultural editor, Graham Harvey, who makes a very strong case for a return to mixed farms and pasture-fed livestock as a way of replacing the chemicals and immense machinery which agri-business has decided we need – or rather they need us to need; it’s crucial reading for anyone concerned about the state of our countryside and the food we eat today.


FORMAAT SELECTEREN:
Directe toegang

Beschikbare digitale aanbiedingen:

Enkele digitale uitgave September 2016
 
3,49 / issue
Deze editie en andere oude edities zijn niet opgenomen in een Home Farmer Magazine abonnement. Abonnementen omvatten de nieuwste reguliere editie en nieuwe uitgaven die tijdens uw abonnement zijn uitgebracht en beginnen vanaf slechts
Helaas geeft deze titel geen nieuwe uitgaven meer uit. Je kunt nog wel oude nummers kopen of naar beneden scrollen om andere titels te bekijken waarin je misschien geïnteresseerd bent.
Besparingen zijn berekend op de vergelijkbare aankoop van losse nummers over een abonnementsperiode op jaarbasis en kunnen afwijken van geadverteerde bedragen. Berekeningen dienen alleen ter illustratie. Digitale abonnementen omvatten het laatste nummer en alle reguliere nummers die tijdens uw abonnement verschijnen, tenzij anders vermeld. De door u gekozen termijn wordt automatisch verlengd, tenzij u tot 24 uur voor het einde van het lopende abonnement opzegt in de Mijn Account-zone.

Issue Cover

Home Farmer Magazine  |  September 2016  


This month Home Farmer welcomes organic gardener, author and broadcaster, Charles Dowding, to our team of knowledgeable contributors, and he begins with a timely feature on preparing for early cropping next year. As all good gardeners know, it’s in autumn that much of the real work for next year’s early harvests is done, with soil preparation, and sowing and planting of veg that will often lie dormant, once established, over the winter period to get off to a flying start as the days lengthen and the temperatures warm up in spring. We also have sound advice from Helen Babbs on growing grapes in a corner of the polytunnel and up along the roof space, Sue Stickland juggling summer harvests and autumn planting under cover, John Harrison on seed-saving and 5-star compost, Sally Morgan on growing edible hedges and perennials, and Gaby Bartai on making the most of tomato and pepper gluts, with good advice on controlling any future excesses. We have three different views of smallholding too – one from a person who managed to grab a slice of the good life, one from an experienced smallholder who runs courses, and one from regular contributor, Dot Tyne, who simply describes each day as it is in her popular smallholder diary slot. We also feature bees, chickens, Danish pastries, laver bread (and other seaweed delights), green tomato cake and rose-hips. And on a more general level we have a feature on no-till agriculture, a growing movement which regards regular ploughing techniques as highly damaging to our soil structure, and Archers agricultural editor, Graham Harvey, who makes a very strong case for a return to mixed farms and pasture-fed livestock as a way of replacing the chemicals and immense machinery which agri-business has decided we need – or rather they need us to need; it’s crucial reading for anyone concerned about the state of our countryside and the food we eat today.
meer lezen minder lezen
A joyous, information packed, magazine that celebrates the home grown and home-made lifestyle covering what you need to know to grow your own vegetables, keep a few poultry in the back garden and plenty of tasty recipes for using up the produce and making the most of seasonal food. And, if that’s not enough we’ve loads of DIY and crafty bits too!

Als abonnee ontvang je de volgende voordelen:


•  Een korting op de verkoopprijs van je tijdschrift
•  Je tijdschrift elke maand op je apparaat
•  Je zult nooit een editie missen
•  Je bent beschermd tegen prijsstijgingen die later in het jaar kunnen plaatsvinden

Je ontvangt 12 edities gedurende een periode van 1 jaar Home Farmer Magazine abonnement op een tijdschrift.

Opmerking: Digitale edities bevatten niet de omslagitems of supplementen die je zou vinden bij gedrukte exemplaren.

Uw aankoop hier op Pocketmags.com kan op elk van de volgende platforms worden gelezen.


Je kunt hier lezen op de website of de app downloaden voor jouw platform, vergeet niet in te loggen met je Pocketmags gebruikersnaam en wachtwoord.

Apple Pocketmags Online Pocketmags Google Pocketmags
De Pocketmags-app werkt op alle iPad- en iPhone-apparaten met iOS 13.0 of hoger, Android 8.0 of hoger en Fire Tablet (Gen 3) of hoger. Onze webreader werkt met elke HTML5-compatibele browser, voor pc en Mac raden we Chrome of Firefox aan.

Voor iOS raden we elk apparaat aan dat de nieuwste iOS kan gebruiken voor betere prestaties en stabiliteit. Eerdere modellen met lagere processor- en RAM-specificaties kunnen te maken krijgen met een langzamere paginaweergave en incidentele app-crashes, die buiten onze controle liggen.
5,0
/5
Gebaseerd op 2 Beoordelingen van klanten
5
2
4
0
3
0
2
0
1
0
Bekijk beoordelingen

Brilliant Home Farmers Mag

Brilliant Home Farmers Mag, if you have a back yard farm this is for you, always good advice and info, lots of ideas, regardless of space. Beoordeeld op 15 april 2019

Artikelen in deze editie


Hieronder vindt u een selectie van artikelen in Home Farmer Magazine September 2016.

Free Sample Issue
Probeer een Gratis monster van Home Farmer Magazine