~ moulding.to the Boughs, .and the 
_ Fruits and Leaves to falloff; againft 
which muft be, provided, ,andidaily 
be taken off with Map, and a$ foon 
_as the Seafon doth any way pertnir, 
to open the wooden Shutters,to make 
-thefe moift; Vapors, which arifevout 
of, the Earth, to.go,,away.; for -by 
reafon of the Doors;and VVindows = 
being long fhut.clofe) chey.contiz 
nue. ~ ; vat Sri g ) ie 
Andon this manner muft weor- the 
der our Bufinefs in. times of Frit, timeto 
which now ceafing,! the. Windows orent* 
mutt. be opened. again, to.air, she Win- 
Trees; and furcher deal with, hem ¢o"s 
as:is Yaidyabove.cso1t 2:1 [is aqo ages 
But to tye the'making of Firéto 
December, January, and Febriaty,;as 
fome, Authors -chold,: is not good !ii 
“otr Judgment.;iforat happens thar 
_ whole Wintets pafs, and no need 6 
 makea Fire, ds'mié chave mentioned 
above ; But it is befof all; thatowe 
oxder our Affairs according 10 che 
M2 VVea- 
\ 
Or Netherlandifh Hefperides. 171 
yet my. Trees are dead. \ 
Atwhich they all Laughed, as 
perceiving that the overmuch Heat 
had ftifled and dryed up his Trees : 
“Whence we may fee, that not the 
* great Charges, but the right Know- 
ledg, gives the beft Fruits. 
When now the Froft is paft, and The 
the Spring draws on, the Trees muff time for 
be ufed again tothe Air, by theo- shin 
pening and fhutting the wooden and the 
glafs-Windows, in convenient and ei 
due time, and therein order our Af- | 
fairs according as the ‘Weather gives 
‘Direction. 
For this is fure, that Mift, Vapor, 
Moiftnefs, and Froft, muft not be 
fuffered in the Green-Houle. 
In this Work, we muft continue Ty, 
to the time that we fet thefe Trees time to 
again in the beginning of May. into sida 
the open Air, in mild and rainy again. 
“Weather ; above all, take ‘Care im 
the bringing of them out, that the 
Sun doth not too fuddenly fhine up- 
; Ma on 
PUGS Ee Fe 
REM. rs 
a Sire: age ter” 
‘here fhewed. 
. Remember a certain Accident, 
which in regard of mentioning the 
making of Fire, I cannot omit to 
Relate: 
ing into the famous Garden of the 
Sieur Roeters, and after he had taken 
Notice of all things, asked that fa- 
mous Practitioner and Orderer, how 
much Turf he burnt in a Winter, 
in regard his Trees looked fo exceed- 
ingly fair? The Sieur, Roeters not 
knowing the reafon of the Queftion, 
-Anfwered, that he had preferved and 
kept all his Trees for two Years, 
with about an hundred Baskets full, — 
» (which comes to about twenty. four 
Gilders, which are about forty. fix, | 
or forty feven Shillings Sterl. ) and 
that there was fome Quantity left. 
How is that poffible, replyed. the 
other 2: My Servant hath fpentabove 
two hundred Baskets of Turf, and. 
yet 
“oo ltthe Belgick; 
on them, but ufed to ieby degrees ; 
Jarly in their proper Places; thaethey — 
may keep their Leaves; & Fruitsyand 
and thenorder’ thefi ‘further, “with 
VVateriiig, Pruning) atid other fitch 
like Actions, asare fhewed particu- 
Reward their. Matters Labours with 
— GoldenHefperial-Apples,« which no 
Practitioner {hall obtain, except . 
he -hath before duly’ Tamed: and 
se “Overcome the ftrong winter-Dragon. 
“SCH APE RD I 
Of Gathering the Bloffoms ands Fruits. 
Unload- 
ing of 
the 
‘Trees. 
Be is neceflary'to ‘the Prefervati- 
 omof the Trees; that we ‘eafe 
them:of their Bloffoms and Fruits in 
due time; for through the abundant 
-Blofloming they are wafted and 
{pent ., lofe their Strength, and to- 
tally Decay, becaufe it is impoffible 
fo feed them all, 
. Therefore 
A certain Perfon of Quality, com 
dec 
AR a tot gy pe TO coal 
Weather, and do therein as we have — 
