APPENDIX II. 



which separates each main stalk, is too great when the shoots 

 are trained obliquely and not perpendicularly from the main 

 stalk upon which they grow, as is the case in the trellis of 

 which we have spoken. Moreover, the irregularity with which 



Fig. T3. 



the branches are distributed upon the stalk causes an unequal 

 distribution of sap, and its determination to certain points, whe 

 ther of superabundance or scarcity, resulting in the destruction 

 of the shoots less favorably situated. 



VERTICAL CORDOX WITH ALTERNATE SHOOTS (Fig. 78). M. 

 Rose Charmeux has brought this new arrangement to perfec 

 tion in the following manner. He plants the stocks at a dis 

 tance of 28 inches one from the other ; then he regularly distri 

 butes the shoots on each side of the stem, making them spring 

 alternately every 10 inches in such a manner that they may be 

 separated by an interval of 20 inches on the same side of the 

 stem. We shall find, in discussing the method of pruning, how 

 perfect regularity in this recpect may be obtained. 



