of drawing the Canvas over them is only at thofe 
_ the fame Care we directed for the Tulips ; and 
phrenas, and the like. . 
Ree UOOICIOIOO ODIO OOOO III OK 
dy CHE A Poe Thais 
Tha Coir ase Management of the Flower Garden for this Week. 
Size and Depth ; for the whole Ball of Earth con- 
) JE Garden by this Time: glows with a | 
edie te fi tain’d in the Pot, be open’d for them. 
. Variety of elegant Flowers in their fepa- ) 
tate Beds: the Anemonies are in great Perfec- 
tion, and the Ranunculus’s daily difcover new 
Beauties. TR get vee 
Thefe let the Gardener manage as we have 
 juft directed him to treat the Tulips when in 
Bloom; and he will have the fame Advantages. | 
The Wind, Rain..and Sun being kept off by | ; 
moderate Covering, the Flowers will not only be and fettled by a gentle | Water ing; the Plants 
much finer, but they will laft double the ufual | will be fo far from r ie bs Si Check from this 
‘Time they do when expofed to Accidents. | Removal, that they will Gnive the better. : 
The beft Method of defending them is by | The Earth kept about their Roots furnithes 
Hoops fupported on Stakes, and a Covering of | @ great deal of Nourifhment, and from the Fi- 
Canvas; thus there is Air enough, and. the Time bres cut off at the Surface of the Lump, 
: there will fhoot out innumerable others into the 
~ Hours, when none look at them: the Morning | new Mould. If the Weather: be tolerable they 
and Evening are the Times for viewing Flowers, wil thrive upon this furprizingly. qe 
not only as they are moft frefh and vigorous at | 
_thofe Times, but that a full Sun is not the proper 
Light for diftinguifhing their Colours. = 
_ The earlieft Flowers of Spring are paft, and 
thefe' we have juft named fupply a middle Place 
Earth be fhook out with them without breaking. 
The Surface will be cover’d with Fibres, which 
muft be trim’d off, and the Ball fet upright in 
the Hole. tae | | 
~The Mould muft then be filled in about it, 
Some Weeks ago we directed the fowing fe- 
veral of the hardy Annuals in Patches, upon the 
Borders where they are intended to remain. T hefe 
will be by the prefent Week in fome Forwardnefs, 
-and as they come early they will foon be paft the 
between their Seafon and that of Summer Plants. | Beauty of their flowering. There will be want- 
While they are’ proteéted to keep them in flower | ing a Succeffion and Supply, and there are many 
till the Succeffion is ready to come in behind | Kinds which will now grow from the Seeds very 
them, Care muft be taken of the Roots of thofe | well = : 
autumnal Flowers, and of the other Plants which In diftin& Parts of the Borders let there be 
are’to follow, *  "" | | | now a frefh fowing of the former, and fuch other 
_ The Amaryllis’s, and feveral otherof theautumnal | Kinds as will rife under the fame eafy Culture. 
Flowers we have defcribed in the preceding Num- | ©The Seeds mutt be put into the Ground in 
bers, are now in a Condition to have their Roots | the Manner we direéted the others, and all the 
taken out of the Ground. “Let this be done with | Difference of Management muit be more free 
: nd | and frequent Waterings. Nature allows fewer 
let them have the fame Advantage of drying | Showers in this advanced Part of Summer. 
gently upon Mats, in an airy Place, out of the The Kinds we would advife for this Weeks 
Reach of the Sun. des le ; fowing are Lobels Catchfly, the Dwarf Lychnis’s, 
When they are fufficiently harden’d they mutt 
be ty’d up in Parcels, and preferved till the Time 
: | and Tangier Peafe. 
of planting them, toward the End of Summer. 
- The Hyacinth Roots are now to come under 
om The Plants which are to come into flower in | a very careful Management. Let the Gardener 
the fucceeding Months, are partly the Perennials | recolleét what we have juft faid of the Tulip, for 
and hardy Annuals raifed in the Borders, and | Nature is uniform in her Produétions, and the 
partly the tender Annuals from the Hot-Beds, | Root of one bulbous Plant fares as that of ano- 
Of thefe there are a. large Store, the Double | ther after the Time of flowering. 
Balfam, French and African Marigolds, Gom- | Let the Gardener at this Time ‘obfetve the 
| Pas Leaves of thofe fine Hyacinths which are patt 
We have ftom time to time directed the harden- flowering, he will find them foon begin to de- 
ing of thefe to the Air; and it will be very pro- | Cay; and when it appears that the Roots fend 
per now to think of planting out the ftrongeft and | them up no more N ourifhment, they are to 
forwardeft of them. | be taken out of the Ground. They mutt not be 
They are, we will fuppofe, in Pots, and the | now laid in the Air to dry, for they have a great 
Frames under which they ftand have been accy- | deal yet to receive from the Ground. 
ftom’d to be open’d for the admitting Air to When the Roots are up, let the Mould of the 
harden them. | Bed be ftirred and prepared for: laying up>into 
Let the Places in the Borders where they are | 2 kind of Ridge. 
to ftand be mark’d out; and let Holes of a full Let the Roots be carefully laid into this Ridge, 
I 
not 
The Evening of a cloudy Day is to be chofen 
for planting, them, and let the whole Ball of © 
the Small Convolvulus, with fome Lupine, Sweet _ 
May. 
sateen 
