Mr. Delahi^arre on WhlU Mulberry UtJ^e:, lOy 



fit for fowinp:. Obferve that that kind of feed never keeps 

 good longer than one year. 



The mbft proper thiic to fow the mulberry, is in the 

 beginning of ApriL Some people pretend that the f:ed 

 fucceeds well when fown in the very trench made for the 

 hedges. But a long experience teaches that it b better to 

 raife the plants in a nurfery where the ground is rich and 

 well manured. You will chufe for that purpofe a place 

 faeltered from the north and cold winds. This place mufl: 

 be digged and prepared before the winter. The beft way is 

 to make a bed four feet wide only, in order to be able to 

 water it, and pick the weeds out, without trampling upon 

 the feed bed. Before you water the feeds, you muft fpread 

 over fome light ftraw to prevent the ground from becoming 

 too hard, which otherwife would be an obflacle to the rifmg 

 up of the young plants. 



The plants are fit to be tranfplanted the following year in 

 the trenches intended for hedges, according to the manner 

 and at the time above-mentioned. 



The mulberry grows in every foil, but it delights in a rich 

 fandy ground. 



