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Comprehensive and practical guide to growing and harvesting Australian bushfoods.Grow Your Own Bushfoods is the first ever comprehensive and practical guide to growing and harvesting more than 140 kinds of Australian bushfoods right in your own backyard. Detailed plant profiles describe ideal growing conditions and characteristics of each species. In addition there are suggestions on the best ways to prepare and eat your bushfoods. A bushfood directory is also included which lists suppliers of catalogues, seeds and seedlings as well as native plant gardens open for inspection. Written with an…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Comprehensive and practical guide to growing and harvesting Australian bushfoods.Grow Your Own Bushfoods is the first ever comprehensive and practical guide to growing and harvesting more than 140 kinds of Australian bushfoods right in your own backyard. Detailed plant profiles describe ideal growing conditions and characteristics of each species. In addition there are suggestions on the best ways to prepare and eat your bushfoods. A bushfood directory is also included which lists suppliers of catalogues, seeds and seedlings as well as native plant gardens open for inspection. Written with an emphasis on using natural growing methods, Grow Your Own Bushfoods enables everyone to enjoy Australian bushfoods while at the same time preserving our endangered plant species.
Autorenporträt
"Lessons Well Learned," is a fictional tale of approximately 96,000 words that describes the life of George William Smith. A breakdown of the chapters is as follows. Chapters 1 through 9: The story begins in 1905, when George's adopted father suddenly dies, and George is on his own for the first time in his life. He decides to make good on a promise he made to himself, that he would join the U.S. Army, even though technically he was too young. His journey begins with a disturbing encounter with a young woman named Darla, but undeterred by the mishap, he makes his way to the Gainesville, Texas recruiting office where he meets Lieutenant Joseph Weidner. Their initial introduction is a little rocky, but eventually the two become best friends. During their initial conversation, we learn that George had been born in Nocona, Texas on Halloween in 1888, and that his mother had died the same night. We further learn that for the first ten years of his life he was raised by nuns at St. John's, a local orphanage. It is also revealed that George's adopted father, an older man named 'Pa' Edwards, was a self-proclaimed white supremacist. Until George was seventeen, he was taught, almost forced by his adopted father, to be a bigot. Edwards insisted that anyone different from them; Indians, Mexicans, Asians, homosexuals, and especially Negros, were all people who should be distrusted and despised. George and Lieutenant Weidner travel to Nocona and St. John's Orphanage where some important information about George's mother and her death is uncovered. It seems the local sheriff declared that her death was either from natural causes or perhaps suicide, but his decision not to investigate was considered by two of the local citizens to be very suspicious. They are convinced she was murdered. The Lieutenant and his young recruit continue their travels to Wichita Falls where George, while searching for his step-mother, prevents Jimmy, a young negro boy, from drowning. It is not realized at the time, but saving Jimmy's life turns out to be a very significant event for George. Chapters 10 through 19: George is now in the Army and stationed at Fort Sill, Oklahoma. His primary job is as an Indian caretaker, protecting a tribe of Apache Indians who live on a nearby reservation. This is where he meets, falls in love, and marries Tula, herself an Apache. He also discovers he has a grandmother who is still alive. Her name is Laza and she too is a member of the local t