2 20 Of the Management and 



The Haithorn makes the bell: of common 

 Hedges, and is either raised of Seeds or Plants^ 

 but fomerimes they do not appe^ir the firft 

 Year ^ the Haw and many other Seeds fleep 

 two Years, and therefore are frequently dug 

 up by the Hufbandman, defpairing of their 

 Growth, before they have gone their whole 

 Tnne, As to their Management, when you 

 have bury'd your Haws in a Trench, in Beds, 

 for Tranfplantation, as foon as they peep, and 

 as often as they require it, they muft be care- 

 fully cleansed of the Weeds for three or four 

 Years, by which Time Seedlings will be of a 

 Stature fit to remove : After this, in Ground 

 which is more dry than wct, (for a watery 

 Soil is unnatural to them) place the firft Row 

 of Sets, about a Foot Diftance from each other, 

 in a Trench of about half a Foot deep, even 

 with the Top of the Ditch, in a floping Po- 

 fture ^ then rsifing your Bank about a Foot 

 upon them, plant another Row, fo as their 

 Tops may juft peep out over the Middle of 

 the Spaces of your firft Row^ cover thefe 

 again to the Height or Thicknefs of the o^her, 

 and place a third Bank oppufite to the tivft, 

 and then finilh your Rank to it's intended 

 Height^ this being done, guird the Top of 

 your Bank, and outmoft Verge of your Ditch, 

 with a fufficient dry Hedge, interwoven from 

 Stake to Stake, to fecure your Qinck from 

 Cattle 5 repair fuch as decay from Time to 

 Time^ and after three Years growth, fprinkle 

 jTorne Timber or Fruit-Trees among them for 



your 



