226 The TraSrical Kitchen Gardiner. 



ter, and then the laft fowed crops will 

 be beft, for the reafon I have juft now 

 fuggefled 5 but if the weather fliould 

 prove very hard, then the firft fowing 

 will be beft, and the laft worth little. 



A fecond fowing, both of peafe and 

 beans, is under frames, or other covers, 

 juft after ChriftmaSy which may be re- 

 moved as we do cabbage plants, fome 

 time in February j if the weather be o- 

 pen and fine, or in the beginning of 

 Marchy to make good any that have 

 mifcarried in the firft crop, or to plant 

 out for an entire new one 5 and thefc 

 will come in very near as foon as thofc 

 fowed in O^ober 5 for, however ftrange 

 it may feem to fome, beans and peafe 

 may be tranfplanted with the fame cafe, 

 pleafure and certainty, as cabbage plants j 

 this the French and Dutch have long 

 experienc'd. And it is obfervable, that 

 when this is the cafe, they do not run 

 fo much to haulm, as when they are on- 

 ly fet in the ufual manner, and cod and 

 bear much better. 



The next fowing (and which may in- 

 deed be continued in fmall quantities, 

 for early facceffive crops, once in twelve 

 or fifteen days) is about the middle or 



latter 



