GARDENING. 
In the Fruit-garden. Thin the leaves 
from over your ripening wail-fruit, espe- 
cially your grapes ; hang up phials of syrup 
every where, to decoy wasps and flies ; 
gather your apples and pears ; prepare for 
plantations of fruit trees ; and set out straw*- 
berries at good distances. 
In the Flower-garden. Plant your hya- 
cinth and tulip roots for early bloom ; pre- 
pare beds for your ranunculuses and anemo- 
nes, sorting the seed late in the month ; 
look to your carnation layers, and to your 
auriculas that are in pots; sow auricula 
peed, if not done before ; transplant peren- 
nials; sow seeds of bulbs; plant box; dig 
borders; roll gravel walks; trim flowering 
plants ; propagate fibrous-rooted plants ; 
transplant pionies, and other knot-rooted 
plants ; as also flowering shrubs in general. 
In the Nursery. Transplant evergreens, 
deciduous shrubs and trees ; prepare ground 
for receiving your late grafts, and for new 
stocks ; propagate trees and shrubs by 
cuttings ; preserve cherry and plum stones 
to raise stocks ; and destroy weeds and 
nests of vermin. 
In the Green-house. Prepare for the re- 
turn of your oranges, &c. which, as the 
weather becomes colder, must be taken in, 
and gradually be more confined in regard 
to the atmosphere. 
In the Hot-house. Admit air only when 
the sun is bright, and the wiud from a warm 
quarter ; water your pine plants moderate- 
ly; add fresh tan to your pits; and prepare 
composts for this branch. 
OCTOBER. 
Kitchen-garden. Plant beans for an early 
crop, preferring mazagans ; you may also 
sow some hotspur peas for the same pur- 
pose ; transplant lettuces for winter service, 
and sow some for spring use ; cover your 
cauliflower plants ; set out your cabbages ; 
force your brocoli, by loosening the soil, and 
drawing it around their stems ; clean your 
winter spinach, tie up endive, and dress 
your bed c f aromatics; plant and set slips 
of herbs ; dress asparagus beds ; earth-up 
celery and cardoons ; sow small salading 
and radishes, also carrots for spring use; 
dig up carrots, parsnips, and potatoes ; be- 
gin trenching for the„benefit of winter ex- 
posure. 
In the Fruit-garden. Gather your late 
pears and apples ; prune and nail your wall- 
tre'es, also your standards, when the leaf 
has fallen ; plant gooseberries and currants, 
also prune them, and set the cuttings ; dress 
strawberry beds, plant the runners ; prune 
raspberries, and plant the young shoots ; 
propagate fruit, trees by layers and by 
suckers. 
In the Flower-garden. Put your auricular 
plants in safe places, laying them on their 
sides to throw off the wet; set out your 
carnation layers ; dress your flowering 
shrubs 1 transplant fibrous-rooted flowering 
plants, parting the roots of such as will ad- 
mit ; plant all kinds of bulbs ; prune flower- 
ing shrubs ; plant hardy deciduous flowers 
and shrubs, and evergreens to hide walls ; 
firs and pines should now be transplanted, 
as also forest trees in general ; propagate 
them by layers ; transplant such layers as 
may be ready ; propagate roses, &c. by 
suckers, and others by cuttings ; set your 
seedlings in a warm place; trim your ever- 
greens, plant box; and cut hedges and 
edgings. 
In the Nursery. Propagate by layers, and 
transplant such as may be ready ; proceed 
also with cuttings ; sow haw and holly ber- 
ries ; sow acorns ; set out seedling stocks 
for grafting; sow plum and cherrystones; 
transplant laurels ; sow beech, and various 
seeds of hardy trees. 
In the Green-house. See that your shut- 
ters fit well, and have all your benches, &c. 
well cleansed and repaired; move in your 
plants in due time, if not done before ; wa- 
ter occasionally, but in small quantity. 
In the Hot-house. See that your tan-pits 
are in proper state, and set your pots in 
carefully. 
NOVEMBER. 
Kitchen-garden. Sow beans, peas, ra- 
dishes, small salading, &c. ; look to your 
celery and endive, so that they may blanch 
well ; attend also to your cardoons ; cut down 
your artichokes ; give air to your cauliflower 
plants; clean your spinach; manure and 
trench ; you may sow a little carrot seed, 
but it will prove a precarious crop ; weed 
your spring onions carefully. 
In the Fruit-garden. Prune and nail vines, 
apricots, &c. ; plant wall-trees, apples, pears, 
cherries, &c. ; clear your fig-trees of the re- 
maining fruit, and if severe frosts come on, 
cover them with mats ; plant filberds, and 
in general all deciduous fruit trees and 
shrubs. 
In the Flower-garden. Clean your bor- 
ders ; plant perennials, tulips, ranunculuses, 
anemones, crocuses, narcissuses, and other 
bulbs; prune flowering shrubs; transplant 
hardy shrubs ; plant forest trees ; roll grass 
