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   Book Info

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The Hydroponic Hot House: Low-Cost, High-Yield Greenhouse Gardening  
Author: James B. DeKorne
ISBN: 1893626261
Format: Handover
Publish Date: June, 2005
 
     
     
   Book Review


From Library Journal
In The Survival Greenhouse (Walden, 1975), DeKorne described his attempts to become self-sufficient in food production because of widespread predictions of energy shortages and ecological collapse. He used windmills to generate energy and tried to set up a mini-ecosystem of rabbits, fish, and plants in his hydroponic greenhouse. Twenty years later, he ruefully admits that warnings of global famine did not quite come true, that windmills are an impractical source of energy in most parts of the United States, and that aquaculture did not live up to its promise as a cheap source of protein. In this revised edition of that book, he concentrates on maximizing greenhouse plant production, devoting chapters to alternative energy sources; control of temperature, light, and carbon dioxide in the greenhouse; hydroponics; and practical aquaculture. This book would be an excellent companion to basic guides to hydroponics or organic greenhouse management; anyone interested in energy-saving alternatives to traditional gardening will find this a delight.- Beth Clewis, J. Sargeant Reynolds Community Coll. Lib., Richmond, Va.Copyright 1992 Reed Business Information, Inc.




The Hydroponic Hot House: Low-Cost, High-Yield Greenhouse Gardening

FROM THE CRITICS

Library Journal

In The Survival Greenhouse (Walden, 1975), DeKorne described his attempts to become self-sufficient in food production because of widespread predictions of energy shortages and ecological collapse. He used windmills to generate energy and tried to set up a mini-ecosystem of rabbits, fish, and plants in his hydroponic greenhouse. Twenty years later, he ruefully admits that warnings of global famine did not quite come true, that windmills are an impractical source of energy in most parts of the United States, and that aquaculture did not live up to its promise as a cheap source of protein. In this revised edition of that book, he concentrates on maximizing greenhouse plant production, devoting chapters to alternative energy sources; control of temperature, light, and carbon dioxide in the greenhouse; hydroponics; and practical aquaculture. This book would be an excellent companion to basic guides to hydroponics or organic greenhouse management; anyone interested in energy-saving alternatives to traditional gardening will find this a delight.-- Beth Clewis, J. Sargeant Reynolds Community Coll. Lib., Richmond, Va.

     



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