Sept. 7^eGardene?^s Kalenda?\ 279 

 and the earth of the alleys fhould be laid upon 

 the beds to new mould them; and where the 

 beds want dunging, there (hould be fome very 

 rotten dung taken out of old Cucumber and 

 Melon-beds, and laid upon the Afparagus-beds, 

 after the weeds are hoed off, and then the dung 

 covered over with part of the earth from the 

 alleys. 



If there fhouLd happen much rain at this fea- 

 fon, your young Cauliflower plants muft bepro- 

 tedted therefrom ; otherwife it will caufe their 

 ftemstoturn black, and the outer Han will de- 

 cay in a fhort time. This is what gardeners 

 term black {hanked. 



Moft of your fummer crops being intirely 

 cleared from off the ground, you fhould, in 

 dry weather, hoe and clear the ground from 

 weeds, which will preferve it neat and clean 

 until you (hall prepare it for frefli crops, or 

 trench it up to lie till fpring; the fuffering of 

 weeds to grow after the crops are taken off the 

 ground, impoveriilies it, though the weeds are 

 not fuffered to feed. 



At the end of this month you may plant 

 fome Beans, and fow fome early Peas, in warm 

 borders ; where, if they abide the winter, they 

 will produce their crops early the fucceeding 

 fpring. 



T 4 Tranf. 



