( 3»8 ) 



colleclion, trained as common ftandards, 

 in orchards, parks, avenues, and the 

 borders of fields, or on any out parts, 

 either in continued ranges, forty or fifty 

 feetafunder, or more, where large quan- 

 tities of the fruit are required for any 

 public demand, or in detached ftandards, 

 fingly, here and there, or arranged on 

 the boundaries of orchards, &c. in af- 

 femblage with Chefnuts, where they will 

 alfo defend the interior more capital 

 fruits from the infults ofboifterouswinds, 

 in all of which they mould generally be em- 

 ployed as full ftandards, with fix or fcven 

 feet Items, and fuffered to branch out 

 above into fpreading heads, without 

 Jhortening the branches, as they bear al- 

 ways moftly towards the extremities, 



Though 



