298 FRUIT GARDEN DISPIAYEB. 



nerally planted In the kitchen-garden, fonie- 

 times in a roxv round the boundary of the 

 principal quarters or outward borders, others 

 in crofs jrows to divide large quarters into 

 fmaller compartments, twenty or thirty to 

 forty or fifty feet wi^e ; and often in conti- 

 nued plantations, in rows fix to eight or ten 

 feet aiunder, by fix feet in the rows, as in the 1 

 numerous large market grounds round Lon- i 

 don, where there are fometimes very confi-v 

 derable plantations in that order of planting, 

 to produce large fupplies of berrlca for tne 

 markets. Likewife goofeberries are fome- 

 times planted^in fmall portions againfl South 

 wails, and trained in the wall-tree order, to 

 furnifh earlier fruit, both to ufe green and 

 Avhen r.pe. 



All the varieties of thefe buflies, or flirubs, 

 bear their fruit both on the young wood of a 

 year old, and on the feveral years old branches, 

 generally upon fmall fpurs and fnags emitted 

 along the fides thereof, the fame branches and 

 fpurs continuing feveral years fruitful ; and if 

 the branches are kept moderately thin, not 

 cut down too niuch, and according as any grow 

 diforderly or become of an unfruitful nature, 

 or decay, they are pruned out, and young 

 wood retained occafionally, as hereafter tsr 

 plained, to lupply the places thereof, the 

 trees may thus be continued long in good 

 fruiifuJnefs, and wiil always produce fall 

 crops of large fruit in proportion. < 



Young trees for planting may be obtained 

 in good perfection, in moA of the public nur- 



fery- 



