94 AFIER CULTCTRE. 



Dahlia is greatly benefited by this system of mulching and watering, ; 

 for, unlike many other kinds of plants, it seeks its nourishment chiefly 

 from the surface of the soil; and its roots will be found, in favorable 

 circumstances, to be clustered together near it. Throughout the sum- 

 mer it is also advantageous to the plants' to have the earth around the 

 roots carefully loosened by the use of a fork, from time to time. 



AFTER C0I.TURE. 



Dahlias should never be pruned until the bloom buds show, and 

 then but few branches should be cut out, and only such as are grow- 

 ing across others. The buds should be thinned, for it is by these that 

 the strength of the plant gets exhausted? By removing all that are 

 too near one to be bloomed, and all those that show imperfections 

 enough to prevent them being useful, much strength wiU be gained 

 by the future flowers. So, also, by puIUng off the blooms themselves, 

 the moment they are past perfection, instead of letting them seed. 



Winds and sun are both detrimental ; and the practice of fixing the 

 blooms in the centre of a flat board, and covering them with glass or 

 flower pots, as they may want light or shade, is becoming general. 

 The more easy way is to use a paper shade for any particular fine 

 bloom ; for however the flowers may be coaxed and nursed under 

 cover, a stand of blooms, grown finely, and merely shaded from the 

 hottest sun, will beat all others in briUiancy, and in standing carriage, 

 and keeping. It is right to go round the plants, and, wherever there 

 is a promising bud or bloom, to take away all the leaves and shoots 

 that threaten to touch it as they grow ; take off also the adjoining 

 buds ; and if the weather be windy, make it fast to a stick or one of 

 the stakes, that it may not be bruised or frayed ; shade it from the 

 broiling sun, and it will so profit by the air and night.dews, as com- 

 pared with the bloom under pots and glasses, that if the growth be 

 equal, the blooming will be superior. Nevertheless people will cover; 

 and where there is a disposition to a hard eye, it will hardly come out 

 perfect unless it is covered. As the end of September approaches, or 



