Eat Your Yard! Have your landscape and eat it too. 2014-04-14T16:18:11Z http://eatyouryardbook.com/?feed=atom WordPress Nan http://www.eatyouryardbook.com <![CDATA[Washington Post Express review]]> http://eatyouryardbook.com/?p=253 2010-06-28T06:47:01Z 2010-06-28T06:46:18Z The Washington Post’s Express edition — for riders of the Metro train system — has published a lively interview with Nan about Eat Your Yard! Read the whole story at: http://www.expressnightout.com/content/2010/06/nan-chase-eat-your-yard.php

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Nan http://www.eatyouryardbook.com <![CDATA[“Beautiful and delicious”]]> http://eatyouryardbook.com/?p=255 2010-06-28T06:44:46Z 2010-06-28T06:37:25Z That’s how reviewer Marueen Halsema of The Appalachian Voice described Eat Your Yard! She writes: “It is a cookbook, a gardening guide and a storybook all in one beautifully packaged, visually compelling arrangement.”

To read the whole story, see the beautiful June issue of the magazine: http://www.appvoices.org/index.php?/site/voice_stories/june_august_2010_issue_in_downloadable_pdf/issues/583

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Nan http://www.eatyouryardbook.com <![CDATA[“Like a conversational guide”]]> http://eatyouryardbook.com/?p=212 2010-06-28T06:48:23Z 2010-06-07T19:35:55Z The Herald-Sun of Durham, N.C., recently featured a story with garden tips from Nan’s Asheville, N.C., edible landscape. See http://www.heraldsun.net/view/full_story/6956042/article-An-Edible–Landscape.

Here’s a bit of the story by Dawn Baumgartner Vaughan: “Eat Your Yard! reads like a conversational guide, with recipes and growing tips interspersed with photographs of trees, shrubs, vines, herbs and flowers, including those in Chase’s own yard. Her garden is on a city lot of less than a tenth of an acre, plus her house. With a smaller yard like hers, with about 40 to 50 feet of space, it’s a matter of looking for mini climates and shady spots. She has a Callaway Crab crabapple tree in her yard, a sweeter crabapple she can eat off the branch.”


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Nan http://www.eatyouryardbook.com <![CDATA[Our State magazine features Eat Your Yard!]]> http://eatyouryardbook.com/?p=208 2010-06-28T06:48:45Z 2010-06-07T19:24:18Z North Carolina’s Our State magazine (June 2010) not only features a story about Nan’s edible landscape in Asheville, N.C., but offers video as well. The clip was produced by talented young videographer Jenny Tenney. Here’s the link:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y81DPF295Tc
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Nan http://www.eatyouryardbook.com <![CDATA[New York Times review]]> http://eatyouryardbook.com/?p=205 2010-06-28T06:50:38Z 2010-06-07T19:18:41Z The New York Times calls Eat Your Yard! “useful and beautiful.”

Read the complete review here: http://www.nytimes.com/2010/06/06/books/review/Gardening-t.html?ref=review

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Nan http://www.eatyouryardbook.com <![CDATA[Eat Your Yard! review in Mountain Xpress, March 2010]]> http://eatyouryardbook.com/?p=183 2010-06-17T12:31:56Z 2010-03-10T15:30:45Z Mountain Xpress reviewer in Asheville, N.C., gave Eat Your Yard! a big boost by highlighting Nan Chase’s classroom sessions at the Organic Growers School.

Click here to read the review

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Nan http://www.eatyouryardbook.com <![CDATA[Bark House Style By Chris McCurry & Nan Chase]]> http://eatyouryardbook.com/?p=93 2010-06-17T12:35:29Z 2010-02-20T21:40:14Z Bark House Style: Sustainable Designs from Nature, by Chris McCurry and Nan Chase.

Designer Chris McCurry and writer Nan Chase share the fascinating history of bark-covered structures, from earliest Native American times to the present. Learn about the green building material that is salvaged from commercial timber operations and becomes a heavy-duty exterior cladding; modern poplar bark shingles never needs stain or paint and can last 80 years.

This beautifully illustrated book includes ideas for exterior and interior applications that include furniture making with bark, specifications for designers and builders, and links to related green-building Web sites.

To preview and order a copy of Bark House Style visit the Publisher’s website.

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Nan http://www.eatyouryardbook.com <![CDATA[Asheville: A History by Nan K. Chase]]> http://eatyouryardbook.com/?p=85 2010-06-17T12:36:04Z 2010-02-15T14:55:57Z Asheville: A History by Nan K. Chase

Nan K. Chase has written the first new comprehensive history of Asheville, North Carolina, in a generation. Illustrated with dozens of historic photographs, this book describes how a special American city built its distinctive architectural heritage.

Once part of an early American livestock route, Asheville became a noted resort town in the early 1800’s. Later, as a Gilded Age boom town, Asheville attracted big-spending magnates who liked building. Their triumphs and tragedies make for some great reading.

Use this book as background before visiting the ever-hip city of Asheville.

To preview and order a copy of  Asheville: A History visit the Publisher’s website.

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Nan http://www.eatyouryardbook.com <![CDATA[Lavender Close Up]]> http://eatyouryardbook.com/?p=78 2010-03-09T22:55:17Z 2010-02-14T04:28:21Z Photo by Nan K. Chase

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Nan http://www.eatyouryardbook.com <![CDATA[Edible Landscapes Lime]]> http://eatyouryardbook.com/?p=58 2010-03-09T22:58:21Z 2010-02-14T03:31:41Z Photo by Nan K. Chase

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