562, 
Augutt. 
very well broke; and in this plant Slips of the | 
double Rofe Campion. 
at a different Seafon; and the Increafe of the | 
the proper Time, this is all that happens on 
the Removal: 
ing is deftroyed by the Check of the Removal, 
and no Flowers are produced the next Year. 
~The Seedling Polyanthus’s will be ina Condition | 
-and every Thing fhould be prepared for it in | 
obferved which we directed for the Primrofe | [ime. 
and Cowflip Kinds on the fame Occafion. | 
“They muft be fet into the new Mould with 
to remove, and the fame Method is to be 
ereat Care, and the Surface well clofed about 
the Roots: after this they muft be watered 
once in two Days, and the Gatdener muft_ 
keep a careful Eye over them, to fee they 
continue as planted, and have the Roots well 
covered, 
The Auriculas which have been fhifted into 
but if the Time have beem | 
and the Mould clofed about their | 
‘Heads. | | ch : MES 
A COMPLEAT BODY 
“Tf the Roots have ftood but a little beyond | freth ae and fhade me mk} ce ieee Sate: Augult,. 
Time to Time, and the fame Care taken that 
we have juft directed for the laft Kind, of 
fuffered to elapfe further, the Bud for flower- | keeping the Roots well covered, andthe Mould 
regularly drawn about the Head. 
_. The Seafon for planting the Hyacinth Tu- 
lip, and Anemone Roots, will foon come on, 
The Beds will require to remain fome Time 
to fettle after they are made up; and even 
before this there fhould be a laft turning of 
the Heap of ee Sy This is the ie 
Time for it. 
Let the feveral Partito. be very well dry, | 
broke, and turned over; and all Lumps rak’d 
out: let them be thrown up not in fingle 
Heaps. as at firft, but in Ridges, and thus - 
lie till the Time of making up the Beds. 
it muft be kept off by a Reed-hedge, and 
SLEAE NEALE AEN ERE NEL LENE NENG NS EEE E EM 
BEG! Ty. 
The Care of the SEMINA eh BAS cat this wees 
II. 
ET a Piece of Ground under good Shade _ 
4 and Shelter be dug up this Week, and 
fhould be removed ‘with Care into larger Pots, 
fhaking them out of the firft with the whole Ball 
of Earth, trimming the Roots which hang on 
j the Surface with Sciflars, and giving them a 
good Watering. In thefe they will flower in 
ereat Perfection the fucceeding Summer. 
This Week let the Gardener mark out the 
Let them be well buried in the Mould 
except their Tops, and as foon as the whole | 
Quantity 1 is planted, let them have a gentle Wa- | 
tering, and repeat it every Evening till they 
are perfectly well rooted. 
As this Kind rarely ripens Seed, and is a | 
very elegant and valuable Plant, every Method. 
fhould be taken of propagating and increafing it: 
| young flowering Shrubs, Foreft, and Fruit Tree 
| Stocks, 
Let him begin now to prepare for them by 
| trenching the Ground. Let it be dug deep, and 
the common Way is by parting the Roots in | broke fine ; ; and by this Means it will be put in a 
Offober, and this affords a very good Supply, . | Condition to receive the Rains and Dews with. 
as the Root in thefe Kinds increafes very faft; | Advantage. 
but this is an additional Method: it gives ai | 
Occafion of producing a Number of good Plants | 
As the Trees which are dlanted in Nutr- 
feries are to be removed afterwards into other 
Places, they fhould by no means have too 
Root is rather promoted, than impeded by it. | rich a Soil in this Place; for they would 
If the Sun.come at any Time of the Day 
upon the Bed where thefe Slips are planted, | they were- removed, were to be poorer: as 
Dung is for this Reafon forbidden in the 
Nurfery, there is the more Occafion for giv- 
ing the Soil in that Place all other Advan- 
| Fages. | 
Our Pupil has learned by this Time, that 
the two Articles which favour the Growth of 
Plants and Trees, are Richnefs and Frefhnefs of 
the Ground: as the firft is forbidden by this 
take them up with a large Ball of the firft | plain Reafon, the other fhould be a all means 
Mould about them. — | encouraged. 
They fhould ftand all Winter in a warm A perfectly frefh Soil is that in which ‘ddins 
and well fheltered Place oppofite the Morning | has grown: and the Value and Advantage of 
Sun; and early in the following Spring they | this is very well known: the next T hing to an 
I unexhautted 
the Plants thus fhaded, fhelter’d, and watered, 
will foon begin to root. 
Toward the latter End of September they 
fhould be taken up, and each planted in a fe- 
parate Pot. They fhould again be fhaded and 
carefully watered till they are well fixed in the 
new Mould, and it will be very proper to 
Ground where he propofes to plant out his 
| never come to any thing, if that into which 
To Crime ct eee 
