ANOTHER HARDY GARDEN BOOK 



All the space at your disposal should be 

 constantly utilized and the moment one crop 

 has finished bearing, it should be pulled up, 

 some more fertilizer spread, the ground 

 again spaded and raked, and another crop 

 sown. For instance, a second crop of beans 

 can follow the spring spinach, and the third 

 crop of peas may be grown where the first 

 beans ripened. Carrots can follow the first 

 crop of peas; celery the second crop, and 

 so on. Beans, peas, etc., can follow each 

 other on the same soil if it be well enriched 

 and again prepared before each planting, 

 but it is preferable to follow one crop by 

 another of a different variety. 



Asparagus, rhubarb, and currants, which 

 no garden, unless very small, should be 

 without, are long-lived and hardy, and if 

 planted carefully in the first instance, will 

 keep in fine condition and bear for many 

 years, with the simplest care. 



The following vegetables are grown in 



