Have you ever considered soil-free gardening? Are you fascinated by hydroponics but concerned about sustainability and cost? Do you want to grow lush, organic vegetables, fruits, and even cannabis anywhere you want – all without the stress?This is the book for you!For many, the dream of having a home garden seems unfeasible simply due to the biggest constraint – having enough space to garden. For those who live in small space, this feels like an impossible endeavor. However, the answer is simpler than many realize - hydroponics! Hydroponic gardening is the science of growing plants without soil. Instead, plants receive nourishment from water and the process drastically cuts the square footage, soilborne disease, and fertility issues of most modern gardening techniques. It reduces the need for acres of farmland down to inches with just a few simple steps.With The Complete Beginners Guide to Growing Your Own Hydroponic Garden, you’ll learn how to optimize your living space while learning to grow your own fruits and vegetables completely soil-free!Andrew Marshall’s professional guidance will take you through everything you need, • The secret science behind hydroponics• A complete history of hydroponics - from the Hanging Gardens of Babylon to the possibilities of space-age crops• Why it’s the perfect alternative method for modern gardens• What you need to know about hydroponic systems – from ebb & flow, drip, water cultures, and more!• How to choose the right hydroponic system for your budget and needs• What the environmental benefits to these methods means for eco-friendly sustainable living• Which fruits, vegetables, and other plants are best suited to the method – including advice on the growth, care, and optimal health for each!• All your Frequently Asked Questions – answered in their own bonus section• And more!It doesn’t matter if you’ve never planted a seed or if you’re a traditional gardening pro looking for a new method, this book has tips, tricks, and helpful instructions to guide you through understanding and successfully mastering the art of hydroponic growing!By the time you’re finished, you’ll be gardening like a professional in no time.With The Complete Beginners Build to Building Your Own Hydroponic Garden, you’ll have the garden of your dreams before you know it!Buy this book now!
Andrew Marshall is an English comedy screenwriter, most noted for the domestic sitcom 2point4 children. He was also the inspiration for Marvin the Paranoid Android in The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy. Although he had also previously adapted stories for Agatha Christie's Poirot, in 2002 he made a further move into writing "straight" drama, with the fantasy/horror-based Strange. He has also written several screenplays.
Born in Lowestoft, he attended Fen Park School and then Lowestoft Grammar School, and afterwards Borough Road College where he studied Mathematics and Psychology. Around the same time, he worked regularly on BBC Radio 4's Week Ending, together with David Renwick, Douglas Adams, Alistair Beaton, John Lloyd, Simon Brett and others. Shortly afterwards he began The Burkiss Way with David Renwick and John Mason (who later dropped out to go to acting school). Renwick and Marshall remained scriptwriting partners for many years.
Brought by Humphrey Barclay to London Weekend Television, originally to repeat his "nursery slopes comedy" Do Not Adjust Your Set with End of Part One, Marshall and Renwick went on to write a series of television satires, including Whoops Apocalypse, Hot Metal and If You See God, Tell Him — the latter originally for Channel 4, but postponed for several years when the channel refused to let them direct it, and finally ending up at the BBC later.
They also experimented with a type of Neo-Vaudeville style in The Steam Video Company for Thames Television, ultimately ending up at the BBC, writing, with Alexei Sayle, Alexei Sayle's Stuff. Along the way they also wrote the screenplay for a film version of Whoops Apocalypse and adapted Tom Sharpe's novel Wilt for a film of the same title.
After a tentative and unsuccessful try at solo writing with Sob Sisters at Central Television, Marshall found long-lasting success BBC One's 2point4 children, adding to it Health and Efficiency and later, Dad. He also found time to adapt Alexei Sayle's short story "Lose Weight, Ask Me How" for the series Spinechillers, in which Sayle also starred.