t >5 3 
fix Years, until the Trees have got Strength, and 
are acquftom’d to the open Air. 
Some curious Perform may obferve, when they 
plant Trees whofe Bark is not well recover’d again, 
te turn the Back of the Graft towards the South, and 
the Cut towards the North, becaufe it will the more 
eaiiiy recover in that Portion ; and it they remove 
fuch kind of Trees as .are tender and difficult to 
grow again, fuch as Fir-Trees and Pines, they muft 
be fare to fet then in the fame Situation, and fo to 
turn them, that they may be expos’d to the Sun and 
Frofts in the very fame manner that they were befoie 
they were taken up ; for by this means thefe tender x 
Trees receiving the fame Impr-efiions of the Air that 
they were acc tftom’i to, are fcarcely fennb'e of their. 
Change; and for this Reafon you muft mark them 
upon the Stem when .you* take them up, which fide 
ftood North, gnd wixch South, fo that in replanting 
them, they mav be put in the fame Scituation. 
Now the fir ft care to he taken in the ordering fuch 
Trees as are newly removed, is to take off all the 
Bads from the High ftanden, when they begin to 
fhoot forth, till you come to the heighth of iS inches,' 
above which no Shuts is to he t? ken from them until 
the third Year,when in March they mu ft- be clear’d of 
fome of their Branches, by cuting off fuchofthem as 
are weak and ufelefs ; in doing of which, the Stumps 
or Stubs muft be cut to the quick and fmoorhed, and 
then prefently cap’d over with Clay, that the Bark 
may recover with the more Eafe. Bur vour Dwarfs 
and Wall-Trees muft be let alone and fufter’d to put ~ 
forth their Sprouts at liberty, without taking any. 
branch from them, during the full Year, except that 
if they fhute upwards mo fa ft, it will be conoenient to 
flop them at a foot high, by pinching them once, to 
make them grow ftrong and large, and likewife to 
make them put forth fuch. other Branches as may 
furnifh the bottom of the Wall. 
At the Foot of Wall-Trees, and fuch as are planted 
B 2 in 
