as. 
* 
As the Produéts named in our laft continue pie now, and rbere are no new ones sobicks r reguire 
immediate Notice; we fball devote the Jucceeding Pages to the ufe a Labours in the 
Ground, 
.ROM the Fruit let the Gardener turn his 
- Thoughts to the Kitchen: Quarter, and | 
chert eontinue and repeat his Labour. ~ 
«We thall: occafionally dire hiny what to fow | 
184 plant every Week in-the Year's and we pal 
pole him to have the Care of a Garden ‘at this 
_ ‘Time; planted ahd fowi enn to the com- 
‘thon Methods. - 
If there es etal jokes Managentenit, 
there have been fown about the Middle of | 
Augif Onions; ew —, and Car- 
rots. 
‘Thefe will: Be appeating now, org eteat Care | 
muft be taken. to pores the Weeds that bt ) 
rife with them. “ 
Nature follows the Gardener’ S “Brand 3 in- every | 
Step; and fows Weeds whierever-he: ote in ithe ) 
se of his Crops. - 
- Thefe erow. fatter. hats wie ufeful: Herta S| 
and they: ee pulled ‘up, or they will rob it - 
of its Nourifhment, and choak every Plant. — 
While this. Care is taking of the Crop already 
fown, Attention muft be had to the’ fu icceeding | 
Sowings ; and Care mutt be employed in faving 
the Seeds for them. 
Thefe ripen every Day in September wpon fe- 
veral Kinds of Plants, = spit Gardener fhould 
watch. them. 
He fhould gather ack  faecelivey as’ they are 
fit, and fpread them in an airy fhady Place. 
. There they are to lie till perfectly dry in the 
Hutks,; ; and then they are to be feparated and 
cleared from them; fpread out a Day or two 
more to harden, and then put up to be ready for’ | 
Ure. 
Mott Gardeners hurry this Bufinet up toge- | 
ther ; but.Nature fhould be watched, her Times | 
of ripening obferved, and fomething done may 
Day, not every thing together. 
- This Method. as it is beft, is alfo eafieht it? 
divides the Work, and makes every Part go off 
‘more pleafantly. | 
The Cauliflowers of different Growth muft at _ 
this Time employ the Gardener’ s Attention in a 
various Manner. 
_ Lhofe which are e forming for a late Crop will ; 
be in Need of Water; sad on the contrary there | 
is nothing from which the young Plants meant 
for the coming Seafon will faffer fo much 
Damage. 
This is a Time at which the Rains are chilly: 
the Effect they take is rotting the Stems of — 
thefe-tender Plants; and that is an Injury they _ 
-mever recover. Thefé muft be theltered there- 
-fore' from thofe Showers, which will be fo bene- 
ficial to the others... 
one with another. 
fucceed better than when only one is made, be- . 
caufe they fhelter each other; and the Seeds . 
| from the Mufhrooms that ripen on one, are cat- 
| it is wrong: 
a 
Brocoli i is another of thofe Produéts which re“ 
“quire ‘at this Time: a parti ticular Care. | | 
~The firlt Frofts are to be expected foon, anti it 
is therefore a Seafon for the lateft Tranfplan- 
- tation. 
Te’ will be proper to plant : a {mall Parcel now ; 
for that will have the Chance of rooting before 
MES Frofts hinder; and it will, by this wert, 
‘come in a very acceptable ‘Seafon. 
“We advifed the Gardener in our laft Number: to 
gather his Spawn, as it is called, of Mutfhrooms, 
in order to make a Bed for them; and we fup-, 
pote it laid according to the Directions then 
| given to prepare it for planting. 
Toward the End of this Week let him make 
the Bed; for about ten Days is the Time that the 
‘Spawn fhould lie before it is. put in. 7 
‘He fees that Mufhrooms grow in ‘cominon 
Pafture-Ground ; but he is hot for this Reafon 
to plant them in common Earth. - | 
Where there has been moft Dung, on come 
up in general moft plentifully; therefore it is plain 
he may promote their Growth by that Means. ” 
Nature fhews him in the Fields, that Dung 
which has been fome time paft its great Heat, 
“is in the beft Condition to promote pee Growth, 
and let him follow her Steps alfo in this. 
Upon thefe Principles, )and with this. Care, 
he may plant his pam with a Certain of 
~ Succefs. ops > 1 ppt 
Let him hing out ke rss rich om a has 
lain. together about three: Weeks, and -is. mel- 
dowed, and grown ‘cool from, its firft., violent 
Fermentation. a 
Dig a. Trench a Yard mi ses a acety 
long for the Dung; or ifva large Quantity; of, 
Mufhrooms are intended to be raifed, Jet there 
be three or four of thefe Trenches dug parallel 
In this. Cafe. they Benbealle 
ried by the Wind to another. . 
Pile up in each Trench a good Quantity of 
the Dung; lay the Surface very even, and cover | 
it half a Foot thick with fine frefh Mould, 
taken.from under the Turf in the fame Places — 
where the Spawn was gathered, 
The common Practice of our Gardeners’ is ‘to 
make this firft Bed of Dung, about twelve In- 
ches thick 5 and in this they follow the Direc- 
tions given them by the common Writers; but 
the firft Bed thould not be lefs 
than two Foot in Thicknefs; for otherwife the 
Moilture and gentle Warmth, which are what 
the Gardener depends upor, are not fufficient to 
