Napa Valley Farming
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Description
Napans tend more than grapevines. The area's diverse soil and mild climate make possible a generous yield of agricultural products. This book traces the cultivation of these products through a chronology of Napa's farming history, from indigenous food plants to the orchards that were planted to feed gold miners--orchards that would soon function as both therapy and sustenance for the patients in the newly created asylum. European and Asian immigrants joined newly emancipated slaves and Mexican citizens who had settled here before the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo. Together they cultivated the land, picked the fruit, nuts, and hops, cut the wheat, kept bees, and tended livestock on dairy farms and cattle ranches. Each chapter begins with a poem inspired by farming or a recipe reflecting the valley's bounty. The scents of peaches, apples, cherries, pears, prunes, and honey linger in the imaginations of thousands of locals, while the trees, hives, and vines continue to thrive wherever placed.
Product Details
Price
$24.99
$23.24
Publisher
Arcadia Publishing (SC)
Publish Date
August 29, 2011
Pages
127
Dimensions
6.63 X 0.31 X 9.14 inches | 0.69 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9780738575247
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Become an affiliateAbout the Author
Paula Amen Judah was born in Nebraska and grew up in Napa, once a little-known small town north of the San Francisco Bay Area, where she married, had two children, taught in the county jail, and performed in bands at night. On a solo reason-to-live odyssey to the Siskiyou Mountains, she fell in love with the Castle Crags, met her second husband, and moved to the northstate. There, she became a high school counselor, taught Spanish, directed plays, and founded The Very Cool Poetry Project, a performing group of high school students. She lives in a cabin with her husband on six acres, where she writes, counsels, and tends enormous vegetable and flower gardens.
Historian Lauren Coodley is the author of numerous articles and books about Napa Valley and California heritage. Coodley holds an MA in History from Sonoma State University and has taught courses on regional and national history at Napa Valley College, where she was awarded the McPherson Award for Distinguished Teaching in 2003.