I agree; the magazine (I read past copies at MIL's house when I do her yard/garden work) has just enough "gardening" info to frustrate the living daylights out of the reader.
The
Western Garden Book, on the other hand, has been my constant companion since it first saved my buns in the garden in the early '80s when I took up gardening in the weird state of California's Bay Area seasons. I had tried to garden in Atlanta while I was in college; at least Atlanta had four recognizable seasons: dogwood, HOT, beautiful/cool, and slush. Those, I understood.
I had gone to high school in Tampa but was too busy to learn much about gardening. However, DDad assigned me the task of cutting off all the runners in his beloved Bermuda grass lawn. They were year-round.... he had some veggies growing in the back yard, too, but they never seemed to make it into our kitchen, and I was truly sooo overscheduled, even in those times, that the back yard seemed very far away. Besides, there was all that Bermuda grass. Yuck.
So Sunset saved me, explained micro-climates, northern California seasons (well, the seasons in the mountains are pretty self-explanatory; they're like Cheyenne and Denver), the clay soil, etc.
And each time I thought I might purchase a $$$ copy of Sunset magazine for an up-to-date gardening article, I looked through it at the grocery store and gave up b/c there was just nothing in the magazine; it was all in the book.
Or the Sunset book on Weeds and Insects (maybe it's called
Garden Problem Solver?)....You can get the
Western Garden Book, 7th ed. (2001) on line for very little $ now that the 8th ed. is out. The 7th is easier to read, as far as I'm, concerned, and I'm waiting until the 9th before I purchase a new one. I hope they figure out the readability thing by then.
Cynthia