Read This: Dry Climate Gardening
I’ve been following Noelle Johnson’s informative and entertaining garden blog, AZ Plant Lady: Ramblings From a Desert Garden, for more than a decade. As a horticulturist and landscape consultant in Phoenix, Noelle is an authority on native and desert-adapted plants suited to her hot, arid climate. Her website engages with lovely photos of her own colorful garden as well as others around town, and she’s generous with maintenance tips. I imagine these are especially useful to people who’ve relocated to the Desert Southwest and are wondering how in the heck to create a climate-resilient garden.
And now Noelle has packaged her vast experience and knowledge about desert gardening into book form! Dry Climate Gardening: Growing Beautiful, Sustainable Gardens in Low-Water Conditions comes out in March and is available for pre-order now. I received an advance copy for review and was pleased to write an endorsement for it:
Noelle’s book uproots all the stereotypes of gardening in an arid or semi-arid region. Instead of expanses of rock and cactus with a few boring clipped shrubs, she shows just how colorful and plant-rich — yet waterwise — a dry garden can be, while walking the reader through the practicalities of smart plant selection and maintenance. Everyone who relocates to the Desert Southwest, or who wants to refresh their yard to meet the challenges of climate change, should get this book and read it cover to cover.
I’m especially excited for Noelle’s book because her region, like my own here in Texas, is sorely underrepresented in magazines, books, and online. Not only that, gardening in a desert climate is a completely different experience than gardening somewhere more temperate. The plants are different. The seasons are different. The soil and even the sunlight are different. Noelle proves to be an excellent guide in helping any dry-climate gardener figure it all out.
While the book isn’t aimed at a Central Texas audience (we’re not a desert climate), there’s some overlap in terms of certain plants, like the purple trailing lantana and Pride of Barbados pictured above. And as our climate grows hotter, we would do well to look westward for planting strategies and species tolerant of both heat and drought, while being mindful of our possible deep freezes and drought-busting floods. West Texans, meanwhile, will find much of the book directly relevant to their low-water gardens.
Photo credit: All photos by Noelle Johnson from Dry Climate Gardening
Disclosure: Cool Springs Press sent me a copy of Dry Climate Gardening, and I reviewed it at my own discretion and without any compensation. This post, as with everything at Digging, is my personal opinion.
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Digging Deeper
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All material © 2024 by Pam Penick for Digging. Unauthorized reproduction prohibited.
Thank you so much for this post! I’ve used her blog as a resource before & am so glad to learn about her book!
I’m happy to share, Kate. Noelle’s blog and now her book are a terrific resource for desert gardeners, and I get a lot out of it here in Austin too.