SHRUBS 



course no hard-and-fast rule can be laid down, 

 because lots differ so widely in size and shape, 

 and the houses we build on them are seldom 

 found twice in the same place. I am simply 

 advising in a general way, and the advice will 

 have to be modified to suit the conditions which 

 exist about each home. 



Do not set your shrubs out after any formal 

 fashion — just so far apart, and in straight rows 

 — as so many do. Formality should be avoided 

 whenever possible. 



I think you will find the majority of them most 

 satisfactory when grouped. That is, several of 

 a kind — or at least of kinds that harmonize in 

 general effect — planted so close together that, 

 when well developed, they form one large mass 

 of branches and foliage. I do not mean, by this, 

 that they should be crowded. Give each one 

 ample space to develop in, but let them be near 

 enough to touch, after a little. 



If it is proposed to use different kinds in 

 groups, one must make sure that he understand 

 the habit of each, or results will be likely to be 

 most unsatisfactory. The larger-growing kinds 

 must be given the centre or the rear of the group, 

 with smaller kinds at the sides, or in front. The 

 season of flowering and the peculiarities of 



SSI 



