LA YINQ OUT THE KITCHEN GARDEN. 



387 



1. Flower garden. 



2. Conservatory. 



3. Greenhouse. 



4. Forcing-house for flowers. 



5. Back-shed. 



6. Area for setting out green- 



house plants in summer. 



7. Culinary departments with 



espaliers. 



8. Espalier-borders. 



9. Pond, surrounded with a stone 



margin. 



10. Forcing department. 



11. Water basin. 



12. Ranges of pits for melons, 



cucumbers, &c. 



13. Piue stove. 



14. Peach-house. 



15. Vinery. 



16. Pits. 



17. Back-shed. 



18. Department for compost, mix- 



ing dung, &c. 



19. Mushroom-sheds, tool-house, 



wintering vegetables, &c. 



20. Slips, bounded by a sunk wall 



fence, surrounded by an 

 open iron railing. 



21. Gardener's house. 



22. Fruit and onion-room, with 



lodging-room for under-gar- 

 dener, and seed-room over. 



23. Yard to gardener's house. 

 24; For pot-herbs. 



Supposing the flower garden and hothouses are to be omitted, then 

 the references may stand as under : 



1. Fruit garden. 



2, 3, 4, 5. To be omitted if not 



desirable. 

 6, 7, 8. Culinary departments, 



with espaliers. 

 9. Pond. 



10. Forcing department. 



11. Water- basin. 



12. Ranges of pits for melons, 



cucumbers, &c. 



13. Pine-stove. 



14. Peach -house. 



15. Vinery. 



16. Pits. 



17. Back-shed. 



18. Department for compost, mix- 



ing dung, &c. 



19. Mushroom-sheds, tool-house, 



wintering vegetables, &c. 



20. Slips as before. 



21. Gardener's house. 



22. Fruit and onion-room, with 



lodging-room for under-gar- 

 dener, and seed-room over. 



23. Yard to gardener's house. 



24. For pot-herbs. 



The following plan, fig. 332, contains an acre within the walls, and 

 is without a gardener's house, or slips at the sides, the situation being 

 supposed to render it necessary to conceal the walls by a plantation of 

 evergreen shrubs made close to them. To prevent the roots of these 

 shrubs from penetrating to the borders inside of the walls, their 

 foundations must be at least three feet deep in the most impervious 

 subsoil, and deeper still on soil that they will readily penetrate. The 

 following are references : 



a, a, Fruit-garden, the border next 

 the outer fence for pot herbs. 



6, 6, Culinary departments with 

 espaliers. 



c, c, Forcing department. 



dj d, Department for compost, 



mixing dung, &c. 

 6j e, Ranges of pits for melons and 



cucumbers. 

 /, Pine-stove. 



c c 2 



