The TraBkal Kitchen Gardiner. 



The borders round are about four 

 foot wide, and are all defign'd for efpa-. 

 iier fruit, which by experience we fin4 

 turn to mere account, and beai; better, 

 than dwarf fruit does : Befides, it keeps 

 a garden more private, and fcreens the 

 quarters planted, as they are to be, with 

 cabbages, peafe, beans, and other vege- 

 tables, in themfelves not the moft agree- 

 able, as to profpeft nor fmell. 



Every quarter is divided into about 

 eight plots, which contain about a pole, 

 or a pole and a quarter fquare ; which 

 is generally large enough for moft crops 

 in a family of fifteen or lixteen, for 

 which this garden is calculated 5 but if 

 the gardiner has a mind to it, he may 

 plant one, two, three, or four of thofe 

 plots or divifions, with one kind of 

 ftufFj for I have created as great a num- 

 ber of them as I could, that he may 

 not want variety 5 and it muft be noted, 

 as a very great error in moft gar-dens, 

 and which caufes them that they are 

 not ftock'd with half that variety as 

 they ought, that gardiners generally fow 

 or plant more of a kind than is ufefulj 

 which is the oeeafion that he has not 

 room for fo many things, nor to come 



in 



