200 



PERMANENT rLAXTATIOXS. 



necessary for convenience. In small 





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places, the "better 

 plan appears to 

 bo to carry the 

 principal walk 

 around the out- 

 side, leaving as 

 much as possible 

 of the interior, 

 where air and 

 light are enjoyed 

 to the greatest 

 extent, for the 

 trees. A border 

 should be left be- 

 tween the fence 

 and the walk, of 

 sufficient width 

 for the trees to 

 be trained on the 

 fence trellis. If 

 ap2>earances were 

 to be strictly ob- 

 served, this bor- 

 der should be as 

 wide as tlie fence 

 is high, but, as 

 a general thing. 



Fiir. 100. — PLAN OF A SMALL FRUIT GARDEN. 



five to six feet 

 will be sufficient ; 

 and w li e r e 

 ground is limited, appearance must, in many cases, be 

 sacrified to economy. Where the work is all performed 

 by manual labor, the walks need not be more than five 

 to six feet wide, as that admits of the passage of a wheel- 

 barrow, and this is all that is required. 



Fig. 100 is a design for a very small garden, fifty feet by 



