O F P R U N I N G 



the lame qualities as thofe for walls, and 

 be treated in every refpeft the fame, in 

 planting, heading down, pruning, and 

 training. 



ALTHOUGH there are dwarfs, or efpa- 

 liers, all round the quarters of a kitchen 

 garden, it will he far from -being fuffi- 

 cient to ferve a family. Thus few fmall 

 families have large kitchen gardens, the 

 apples' for winter, fummer pears, and 

 other common fruits that can grow even 

 in a large kitchen garden, will be inferior 

 to the confumption of a fmall family. 

 A fmall family fhould have in fome con- 

 venient place a few baking apples, fummer 

 pears, fbme of* the common baking plums, 

 a tree of baking pears, fome damfons, 

 and filberts on ftandards. 



THE above are necefiary in all families ; 

 but when they are planted in the kitchen 

 garden they entirely fpoil the herbage. 

 ^yVhere the family is large there ought to be 



large orchard, in which there fhoulci be 

 * 



a quan- 



