jS Art 
fografftfdj imtill ye (hall fee the graf^es put forth a new ftioot, the 
which remaining ftill, ye may graffc thereon againe, To that your 
/graffes in haliy removing may chance to die. 
te.tutofftbe naughty Cions frm. the mad. 
W Hen your gratfes on the itoia (hall, put forth new ;WOod, 
or a new ihooty as of two or three foot longj and if they 
put forth alfo of other fmall Tuperfluous Cions (about thefaid 
members or branches that ye would nourifh) cut off all fuch ill 
^ Cions hard by the head, in the fame yeare they are grafFed in, but 
not fo long as the wood is in Tap, till the winter after. 
How jnmetitnes to cm the priHcipall memUrs 
A Lfo it is good to cut forae of the principal members or bran- 
chesj in the firif year, if they have too many, and then again, 
within two or three years after, when they fliall be well fprung up, 
and the grafFes well clofed on the bead of the ftpek s ye may trira_ 
or drelFe them againe, in taking away the fuperfluqus branches, if 
any there remaine'j for it is fufficient enough to nourifh a young tree, 
to leave him one p incipail member on the head, fothat he may 
be one ot thofe^ that have been gc.ilfed on the tree before, yea, and 
the tree ihall be fairer andbetter in the end then if he had two or 
three branches, at the foot. - But if the tree have been grafFed with 
many great Cions, then ye mult leave him rnore largely, accord- 
. 4ng as ye fhall fee caufe or need, to recover tl « clcFcf on the head 
of the faid grafFc or ftock, 
.. to guide andguvern the [aid trees ', 
W Hen that your trees do begin to fpring, ye muft order and 
fee to them well, the fpace of three or four years, or more, 
until they be well and fttongl.y .growne, in helping them above^ 
in anting the fmal twigs and fupeifluous wood, untill they be fo 
ligh whhout branches as a man, or more if it may be, and then 
fee to.|hem well, in placing the principal branches, if need be, with 
iorkes or wands prickt right and well about them at the foot, and 
to proinc them, fo that one branch do not approach too nigh 
the other, r>or yet fret one the other, when as they do inlangc and 
grow, and ye muft cut off cercaine branches in the tree, whereas 
thcyarethickeft. 
Jkmdoffuk^Jleintreesl 
W Hen cercaine trees are ficK of the Gall> which is a kind of 
ficknefle that doth eat the barkc 9 there yc muft cut if, 
and 
