^o A TREATISE OF 



CHAP. VIL 



Of the feveral forts of Fruit-Trees de- 

 figned for each Wall, in the i ft Plate. 



IF the walls are twelve feet high, there, 

 are fpaces allowed for the feveral kinds 

 of trees, proportionable to their natural 

 growth. That is, for a pear-tree grafted 

 upon a free ftock (or pear ftock) to have 

 200 faperficial feet of walling. 



A pear on a quince ftock, an apple on a 

 paradife ftock, an apricot, an almond, a 

 plum, or cherry of the ftrongeft kinds, 

 a mulberry, and a fig, to have each of them 

 150 fuperficial feet of walling. 



A peach, a neftarine, a morello cherry, 

 the barran dam, and fmall May cherry, to 

 have each of them 120 feet of fuperficial 

 walling. 



The wall A A, a fouth-eaft afpecH:. 

 From E to F. 



1. Mafcaline apricot. 



2. White fweet water grape. 



3. Bruxels apricot. 



4. White fwect water grape. 



5. Orar.gc, 



