GARDENING. 
auriculas have (lone flowering, remove them 
to the open air ; plant tuberoses for the 
next year, transplant perennial flowers, and 
sow some of their seeds; destroy weeds, 
mow your lawns, and keep your gravel 
walks perfectly clean. 
In the Nursery. Water seedlings, and shade 
them, if hot weather ; propagate evergreens 
by layers, and look over your grafts. 
In the Green-house. A free circulation 
should be allowed, and the plants be gra- 
dually introduced to the open air ; remove 
decayed parts, and shift into larger vessels 
where wanted; water freely, and propa- 
gate by layers and cuttings. 
In the Hothouse. Your pines will want 
water often, and fresh air occasionally ; 
you must look to your exotics, and propa- 
gate by seeds, cuttings, suckers, &c. 
JUNE. 
Iiitchen-garden. Your melons must be 
protected from excessive heat by mats over 
the glasses, which they will now bear to be 
well raised , water them and your cucum- 
bers ; all under bell-glasses should have free 
range ; thin out the gerkin plants, leaving 
four in each hole, setting out the rest as 
before directed into ridges, &c. You may 
yet sow for pickling ; transplant celery into 
trenches for blanching, also endive ; set out 
lettuces, and sow more seed ; sow radishes, 
and small salading ; prick out cauliflowers, 
and pay attention to those now getting for- 
ward, save some seed from the best heads ; 
sow a full crop of turnips for autumn; 
weed and loosen about your carrots and 
parsnips, also your beets ; thin and clear 
your onions; transplant leeks, brocoli, and 
borecole ; plant kidney and running beans; 
sow peas and beans for late crops, and a 
full crop of cabbages and savoys for winter. 
Cut no asparagus after this month ; plant 
pot-herbs, gather mint, plant out capsicum, 
love-apples, and basil ; water freely every 
where ; weed carefully, set out cardoons for 
blanching ; sow spinach and radishes ; and 
keep your manure compact, so as not to be 
injured by the heat. 
In the Fruit-garden. Keep your wall-fruit 
clean from insects, and guard against birds ; 
thin the sets where too numerous. Where 
apple, pear, plum, &c. trees have made 
shoots, regulate them duly, taking off all 
that would be superfluous, close to the 
stems; new panted trees should be ex- 
amined, and eventually watered. Look 
over your vines again ; towards the end of 
the month you may hud, or inoculate some 
fruit trees. Clear your strawberry beds 
from suckers, and set out where you want 
new beds, or to supply vacancies. Destroy 
snails, and scare birds. 
In the Flower-garden. Transplant hardy 
annuals, water tender annuals ■ some quick 
flowers may yet be sown to blow in au- 
tumn, take up bulbs that are past flower- 
ing, transplant Guernsey and Belladona lily 
roots, propagate fibrous rooted plants, trans- 
plant seedlings, look to your carnations and 
pinks, both old and seedlings, lay them, as 
also double flowers of various kinds, propa- 
gate by pipings, (or cuttings,) cut edgings, 
clear away weeds, water freely, mow 
lawns and valles, and clip hedges. 
In the Nursery. You may inoculate stove- 
fruit trees, examine last year’s buds, graft 
in general ; inoculate roses ; propagate hardy 
exotics, water seedlings, and shade them ; 
water trees newly planted, and transplant 
seedling pines, firs, &c. 
In the Green-house. Admit air to the fullest 
extent, and bring the plants out into the 
open air ; water and stir the soil in the pots, 
wash off dust, destroy insects, cleanse the 
interior well, plant cuttings and slips of 
myrtle, geranium, &c. Propagate succu- 
lent plants, letting the cuttings remain in a 
dry airy place about ten days. You may 
inarch upon orange and lemon trees, make 
layers of green-house shrubs, and trans- 
plant seedling exotics. 
In the Hot-liouse. Give fresh air and abun- 
dance of water, but not too much at a 
time : take off the crown and side swellers 
from the ripe fruit, as they will in two years 
bear fruit. 
JULY. 
Kitchen garden. Plant out the principal 
crops of cabbages, &c. watering them well 
for several days ; plant out brocoli, and sow 
seed for spring crops ; transplant endive, 
and sow seed for winter crops ; you may 
yet sow kidney and scarlet beans ; set out 
the cauliflowers sown in May; sow small 
salading and winter onions, also carrots for 
autumn; transplant celery, and land up 
that formerly set out, sow turnips ; plant 
out lettuce, sow some seed also of winter 
spinach, radishes, and cole-worts ; pull 
onions, garlic, and shallots ; be prudent in 
not gi' ing much water to your ripening 
melons, as it would hurt their flower; for 
the same reason shelter them from heavy 
rain. When you have cut artichokes, break 
the stem down close to the root. Set out 
cardoons, gather seeds, transplant leeks, 
