Take 8: The Sunset Western Garden Book

(May 3, 2007)  At this year’s San Francisco Flower and Garden Show, the Sunset staff had put up a sign showing every edition of their famous “green book” going back to 1954. The caption asked, “Do you remember your first?”

I remember my first. It was the sixth edition, about 13 years ago. I was shamed into buying it by a garden center employee who rolled his eyes when it became clear that I didn’t know what “the green book” was. “The Sunset book!” he said impatiently. “How can you not have one?”

The Sunset Western Garden Book.
GALLERY >

The guy might have had a little to learn about customer service, but he was right. How could I not have a copy of the most authoritative book on gardening in the west? Now that I’m a garden writer, it’s a professional necessity. If I mention an unfamiliar plant in an article, the editor might call me and say, “What is this plant? I can’t find it in Sunset .” If it’s not in Sunset - well, you’d better explain yourself.

So that was my excuse for rushing right out and buying the hefty, $35 book as soon as it was released. It’s a business expense, right?

The new edition covers 500 new plants, bringing the total to 8,000. To make room within the book’s 768 pages, some plants had to go, and the plant index disappeared altogether. (The book is organized by species name, so the index was handy if you only knew a plant’s common name.) When I talked to an editor at the garden show, he explained that the index was already integrated into the encyclopedia: If you’re looking for mint, just look it up alphabetically, and you’ll see a note referring you to Mentha, the plant’s species name. This works well for specific plants, but just try looking up “grass.” You’ll find an entire essay on the species names of various plants that we think of as grass, and it’s sandwiched between Graptophyllum pictum and Grevillea.

The editors also added short sidebars on the care and feeding of some of the most popular plants in the book. Junipers, for instance, get four pages of charts listing 86 varieties, and after that, a sidebar explains their sunlight, soil, water and pruning needs. For most gardeners, that’s all the information you’d need to satisfy your juniper jones.

The book still offers good, detailed information on climate zones, and the plant selection guide continues to offer good recommendations for plants that tolerate damp soil or deep shade or prolonged drought or a number of other typical West Coast environments.

I was disappointed to see that, given the lack of space in the new edition, the editors decided to devote 18 pages to short essays by garden writers in each region. They’re not useful as reference material; they’re the sort of thing that you’d only read once. The photographs that accompany these essays are fantastic - Sunset knows its plant porn - but I would have rather seen the sections on each climate zone expanded to include more pictures, then forget about the cute little essays.

1 2 NEXT PAGE >SHARE

  • Mail
  • Twitter
  • Facebook

→ post a comment

Recent dirt

April 22, 2010

The Feathered Killers

It's chick season again, so for God's sake please protect the little ones from your murderous hens

April 1, 2010

Monetize It!

Here's a bunch of things that the "prepare for legalization" crowd maybe hasn't thought about yet

March 11, 2010

Self-Contained

Planters for people who hate planters (or: I Am A Genius)

Today

Open Gardens

outdoors / 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Humboldt Botanical Gardens, College of the Redwoods, Eureka. Roam the 44-acre fully fenced property. $5. www.hbgf.org. 442-5139.

Audubon Society Marsh Field Trip

outdoors / 8:30 a.m. Meet at the parking lot at the end of South I Street. Led by Ken Burton. Bring binoculars and have a great morning birding. Trip held rain or shine. 442-9353.

Friends of the Arcata Marsh Tour

outdoors / 2 p.m. Arcata Marsh and Wildlife Sanctuary Interpretive Center, 600 S. G St. Meet leader Sharon Levy for a 90-minute walk focusing on the birds and ecology of the Marsh. 826-2359.

Bird Survey

outdoors / 8 a.m. Shay Park, Arcata. Assist Audubon’s Rob Fowler on his ebird site survey. 839-3493.

More →