Od. 7^^ Gardeners Kakndar. 311 



This month the Grapes in the vineyard 

 fhould be gathered, which fhould always be 

 done ia dry weather, when there is no moif- 

 ture on the Vines ; you fhould alfo be careful 

 not to put any unripe or decayed Grapes 

 among the good ones, for thofe will fpoil the 

 wine. 



Thofe Grapes which are defigned to be pre- 

 ferved for the table in winter, after thofe upon 

 the Vines are gone, fhould now be cut, with a 

 joint of the Vine to each bunch, and hung up 

 in rows, fo as not to touch each other, in a 

 warm room, where fires are pretty conflantlv 

 kept in winter, in which places they will keep 

 till February. 



If the foil of the garden is dry, this is the 

 beft feafon for tranfplanting all forts of fruit 

 trees ; and if the trees are to be purchafed from 

 Nurfery-gardens, you may have much greater 

 choice of plants now, than in the fpring, 

 when the Nurferies are generally cleared of the 

 beft trees : in the choice of them, take fuch as 

 are upon young flocks, which have not been 

 headed down, and whofe grafts or buds are of 

 one year's growth ; nor fhould thofe trees which 

 are deiigned for walls or efpaliers be cut down 

 until the fpring j their roots only fhould be 

 pruned, and all the fmall fibres entirely cut afF; 



X 4 for 



