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The Planet Whizbang Idea Book for Gardeners

The Planet Whizbang Idea Book for Gardeners by Herrick Kimball offers a great combination of tools, tips and stories to enlighten and inspire just about any gardener. From sturdy trellis systems, cloches and raised beds to biochar and Brix meters, this is one you'll come back to year after year. (Yes, this is written by the creator of the Whizbang Chicken plucker.)

The Planet Whizbang Idea Book for Gardeners by Herrick Kimball offers a great combination of tools, tips and stories to enlighten and inspire any gardener.

Sprinkled throughout the text are excerpts from old books, magazines and almanacs dating back to the 1800's. So often we think we're creating something new, when we are really rediscovering what was lost. Take this featured quote by E.P. Roe from The Home Acre (1886) about cheaper vegetables:

I am often told, “It is cheaper to buy fruits and vegetables than to raise them.” I have nothing to say in reply. There are many cheap things we can have. Experience has proved that one of the best things we can have is a garden, either to work in or to visit daily when the season permits. We have but one life to live here, and to get the cheapest things out of it is rather poor ambition.

I couldn't agree more. We need to take the best from the past and team it up with the best new ideas to create a better future. Herrick strikes me as the sort of fellow who understands this wholeheartedly.

How The Planet Whizbang Idea Book for Gardeners is Organized

There are 35 sections to the book, plus a list of additional resources. Some of the projects covered include:

  • How to Make and Use Solar Pyramids
  • How to Make Your Own Forever Plant Tags
  • How to Harvest and Use Wood Stove Biochar
  • An Introduction to Soil Remineralization
  • An Introduction to Brix and Brix Testing

One “project” that I implemented right away (that had me thinking “I should have thought of that” was How to Make a Whizbang Pocket Cultivator. Herrick re-purposed an old fork by giving it a nice tape-padded handle for an easier grip. This hand cultivator is then used to work up the soil in tight areas between closely spaced or small plants. The last time I swung through Goodwill, I hit the mis-matched silverware bin and found myself a nice bent tine fork with a chunky handle. Ta-da! Hand cultivator.

The Planet Whizbang Idea Book for Gardeners by Herrick Kimball offers a great combination of tools, tips and stories to enlighten and inspire any gardener.

Pros and Cons of The Planet Whizbang Idea Book for Gardeners

Pros:

  • Lots of food for thought – literally dozens of ideas, plus the historical excerpts
  • Clear illustrations to help you replicate the project at home
  • Conversational tone of writing, easy and comfortable to read

Cons:

  • Some photos would be nice, but I understand that increase the cost of the book significantly
  • I need more hours in a day to build more of these things, or my kids need to get building… 😉

You may also enjoy our other Gardening posts, including:

Just for the record, I received nothing for doing this review other than a copy of this book and another book of Herrick's, Writings of a Deliberate Agrarian. I believe that this is an exceptional book that my readers will enjoy, so I chose to share it with you.

 Note:  This post did include a giveaway when it first went live, but the giveaway has ended.

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86 Comments

  1. Laurie I so want this book myself to add to the rest of my reference books on how to be a better gardener. I’m now reading and researching permaculture and how to better utilize my landscaping. Fascinating topic and I’ve already started enriching my soil by growing winter rye (cover crop) in my gardens to help replenish my nitrogen back into the soil. With planting winter rye I’m also going to do my planting right into the cover crop to help with erosion and save moisture.

    Thanks for the post on this book and where do I enter my name to win?

  2. You are so creative! I would love to see what you have up your sleeve in this book. I love gardening and would love to have better ways to do it.

  3. I would love this book. I have been growing for the last two years and i have add more each year. So i want to keep on going.

  4. This book sounds fabulous! I too would like to learn more about raised bed gardening. But then again, learning anything new about gardening or many other topics is always an enjoyable thing for me.

  5. This would be an awesome book to have! I’m new to gardening this year and could use all the knowledge I can get. It really appeals to me that the book incorporates old and new ideas! Thanks for your blog!

  6. All of my child’s doctors have stated that I need to get him off of processed foods, and go back to more natural food for him. I need to learn everything, literally everything!

  7. I am getting so frustrated with gardening lately – maybe I need this book to energize me again! LOL It is getting so hard to get a decent harvest from our Michigan garden I’m almost ready to move but wondering if everyone everywhere feels that way or if it’s just me 🙂 Regardless- I’d love to read this book since I’ve read Herrick’s blog for years.

  8. Would love to win this. Why isn’t subscribing enough anymore? Twit, twat, this and that…enough. General comment–not so much this site specific. Just annoying. Common sense…

    1. The reason that bloggers have additional entry options is that it makes a dramatic different in traffic to the site. We’re competing head to head with huge websites with big budgets like Mother Earth News. I don’t have an advertising team or advertising budget. All I have is thoughtful readers who are willing to share my posts – or the promoting that I do myself. I always have an basic easy entry option – other entries are completely optional.

  9. We plan to start a garden next year and I would love tips for preparing garden beds for maximum soil health.

  10. I’d love to learn even more about composting! this would be a great book to add to my collection!

  11. Hope I logged in correctly. I would love to know how to successfully grow green peppers, since some mysterious THING eats my plants. Winning this book of Herrick’s would so not stink, either… 🙂

  12. So much to learn! We just bought a house and I’d like to learn how to take care of the blackberries and raspberries the previous owner left for us.

  13. I am a beginner gardener and we plant a small garden of basic vegetables. We buy starter plants and plant them but they start to die and by July when we should have nice veggies we have nothing. Its happened for the last 2 years. We watered it everyday and I have no idea why it won’t grow. So any information on items like this would be helpful.

  14. I’m very new to gardening. I have SO many questions I’m not even sure where to begin! I guess I’d like to know which plants are good companions for others and how to rotate crops for best nutrition. This book would be awesome to get!

  15. I’m very new to gardening. I have SO many questions I’m not even sure where to begin! I guess I’d like to know which plants are good companions for others and how to rotate crops for best nutrition. This book would be awesome to get!

  16. I would love to have this book. One thing I am really interested in learning about gardening right now is organic soil preparation.

  17. Raising berries, asparagus, perennial type stuff. Maintaining fruit trees organically. Love Herrick’s other books. Looking forward to reading this one.

  18. Sounds like a very cool helpful book. My biggest problem with gardening is finding the time and convincing my husband we don’t need to till but do lasagna gardening.

  19. It’s great to see a review of the book. I was a little on the fence about purchasing, but if I don’t win this copy, I’m definitely going to purchase a copy of my own.

  20. This book sounds very interesting. Could always use new tips and ideas. Started growing some herbs this year and planted one tomato plant in a large patio pot.

  21. Now HERE is a book I will buy, if I am not lucky enough to win it! Let’s see, a comment about what I want to learn about gardening. . .other than, ‘all of it’? How about. . .I want to learn more about companion gardening.

  22. There are two things I’d actually like to learn more about. One is aquaculture but the one I’d really like to more about is permaculture. Great giveaway thanks for the opportunity to win this book. Good luck everyone.

  23. I am trying square foot gardening for first time and so far the bugs are eating my crops as fast as I can plant them. I have tried several eco-friendly sprays such as garlic, hot pepper spray, dawn mixture, etc. Out of five tomato plants I may have gotten a dozen tomatoes and had my first run in with cutworms (which I made my husband pluck off ha ha).

  24. this is a great book i love using things i have around the house to become something else that is useful

  25. I would love to win this book, I need all the help I can get. I have a small yard for my garden but love growing my own food and herbs. Thanks, 🙂

  26. This book seems very impressive. I’m a beginner gardener and love what I’ve done so far. Thanks for offering this.

  27. I could use the book a lot ! I want to know more about how to keep weeds and grass out of my garden and how to get more blueberries on my blueberry plants and how to get the plants to grow really big, also I want to learn how to get a better yield from cucumbers, tomatoes green bell peppers and everything else in my garden ! I am really excited about winning this book !

  28. You asked what I would like to know more about. That is a really tough question to answer. I guess the thing that most confuses me is the pattern and compatibility of a garden. Should I make my raised beds (Furrows) go north and south or should I make them go east and west. I live in Western Washington at the bottom of the Rain Forest. I know that Corn goes on one side and receives sun all day long. I could really use a map to plant by with North marked for me. LOL.

  29. I love your blog. As a beginning gardener I would like to get my soil as healthy as I can so that the food I grow will be nutritious.

  30. I’m new at following Common Sense, but I’m enjoying what I’ve seen so far. Looking forward to what comes next. Maybe homemade ice cream?

  31. I have enjoyed the comments on this website. Also have tried some of the suggestions that I have found in my own garden. Keep up the good work.

  32. I would love to learn more about combining plants together when they are planted to help them get the nutrients they need from the soil and also help be natural bug repellent. I don’t know what the best combinations are, so it would be fun to get information about it.

  33. My biggest challenge now that I have space to garden is figuring out how to inexpensively build up my gardens. I know there are farms around and I’d LOVE to get a whole lot of manure for them, but I have no truck or other way of hauling and I’m just not sure what other materials I could use. We’ve got very clay heavy soil and I’m planning on getting all the chopped up leaves I can, probably buying compost to be delivered and what else I’m not sure…I’d love ideas! Ideally I’d like to do a layered garden and not till if possible….

  34. Sounds like a great book! We are buying our first house and I’d like to use this book for garden ideas.

  35. I’d like to learn more about how to prune raspberries, guide vine growth so it doesn’t get all too hard to get at the berries.

  36. This book looks fascinating and I would LOVE to win a copy of it.
    Thank You So Much For the Opportunity!
    Sincerely,
    Laurie