FRUIT GARDEN DISPLAYED. 20/ 



efpaller regularly from the bottom upwards ; 

 and for half and tall ftandard wall-trees, the 

 grafting, &c. is performed on tall Aocks, at 

 from three or four, to five or fix feet, to ele- 

 vate the head to cover the upper part of the 

 wall ; and for detached full ftandards, they 

 are grafted or budded on high IK-ms at fix or 

 feven feet, and detached half-ilandards at two 

 to three, four or five feet high ; and for dwarf 

 ftandards, they are grafted, Sec. within a foot 

 of the bottom of the flock. The fame mull 

 be obferved of trees raifed from luckcrs, 

 layers, cuttings, 6iC. training them with 

 low or tail items, according to the dif- 

 ferent purpofes intended in wall-trees, lland- 

 ards, ice. to have the branches come out 

 lower or higher. 



The trees raifed as above, f r the different 

 orders of training, in fi:andards, wall-trees, 

 and efpaliers, fliou'd be formed in their infant 

 growth, &c. in the firll and fecond years 

 Ihoots of the head, by pruning them down to 

 a few eyes, efpecially wall and efpalier trees, 

 to force out feveral lateral fhoots near the 

 flem, tu give the head its fi.ll requifite form 

 below, and be as a proper bafis for furnifning 



^ ,all the other branches advancing in regular 



Larder upward. 



This heading down in young year-old fruit- 

 trees, for walls and efpaliers, is particularly 



^i necefiary, and occafionaliy for llandards ; and 



'3'ifor all of which it is more panicularly eligible 



in fuch young trees, as above, as advance 



with only a fingle main (hoot from budding, 



T 2 as 



