13© The TraEiical Kitchen Gardiner. 



flat. The only misfortune that fpoils 

 thefe mufhrooms, and which caufes them 

 to eomc up in the fpring, or in autumn, 

 much better than in the fummer and 

 winter feafons, are the two extremities 

 of heat and cold 5 on which account it 

 is that the beds fhould lie round, to 

 throw off all fuperfluous moifture in the 

 rainy months 5 and fhould alfo be co- 

 vefd over with fhort litter, to keep 

 them cool, and from the too intenfe 

 heat of the fun, as the praftice of Mr. 

 Fairchild and others, on this head, con- 

 firm. And if they be under a little 

 fhade, where the glimmerings of the fun 

 only come, 'tis ftill the better. 



SECT. VIII. CHAP. LXI. 



Of fubterraneoHS fungus's, or tubers, 



TH E fungus reticularis y of Mr. Eve- 

 lyn^ is to be found about Ful- 

 hanty and other places, particularly in 

 a park of my Lord Cotton Sy at Rufbton 

 or Rufhling in North amptanjhire $ and, 

 as I have alfo been infornVd by a gardiner) 

 at my Lord Cullen% from which place 

 the prefent Duke of Montague has often 



4 had 



