106 The Tr attic al Kitchen Gardiner, 



rage back again^ having taken out the 

 burnt mold and put in frefli, to the 

 place where they were before the other 

 morning, and as it were tranfplanting, 

 being no hurt, but rather effential to 

 their well-growing and bearing. And 

 here it muft be noted, that after you 

 have made this fecond or nurfery bed, 

 which we have been fpeaking of, you 

 muft line it well with clean wheat-ftraw 

 before you put the glaffes on, in order 

 to make the heat rife gradually, and in 

 all places alike $ for if you don't, it will 

 rife in patches, which is too often the 

 occafion of the misfortune 1 have been 

 cautioning agauift, and fome part of the 

 bed will be cold while other parts of it 

 burn. 



And thus much muft be faid as to cu- 

 cumbers in their raifing or feed-bed, and 

 in their tranfplanting to the fecond or 

 nurfery- bed 5 the other care being only 

 what I have already fet down, and which 

 I can't too often repeat, in watching for 

 every glance of the fun, the keeping 

 your glaffes as dry as poflible, from the 

 drops and fteam that arife from the bed, 

 and above all, the having fticks ftuck in- 

 to the bed ready to be pulled out when 



you 



