The orchard, and the garden [con]taining cer[tai]ne necessarie, secret, and ordinarie knowledges in grafting and gardening. Wherein are described sundrie waies to graffe, and diuerse proper new plots for the garden. Gathered from the Dutch and French. Also to know the time and season, when it is good to sow and replant all manner of seedes.

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Title
The orchard, and the garden [con]taining cer[tai]ne necessarie, secret, and ordinarie knowledges in grafting and gardening. Wherein are described sundrie waies to graffe, and diuerse proper new plots for the garden. Gathered from the Dutch and French. Also to know the time and season, when it is good to sow and replant all manner of seedes.
Publication
London :: Printed by Adam Islip,
1594.
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"The orchard, and the garden [con]taining cer[tai]ne necessarie, secret, and ordinarie knowledges in grafting and gardening. Wherein are described sundrie waies to graffe, and diuerse proper new plots for the garden. Gathered from the Dutch and French. Also to know the time and season, when it is good to sow and replant all manner of seedes." In the digital collection Early English Books Online 2. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A08520.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed May 16, 2024.

Pages

How trees must be kept from diuerse sicknesses, and first how to keep them from the Canker.

VVHen the Canker commeth in any tree, hee becommeth barren and drie, for it moun∣teth from the stumps, into the top, and when it ta∣keth a peare or apple tree, the bark wilbe blacke and barren thereabouts, which must be cut off with a knife, to the fresh wood, and then the place must be annointed with oxe dung, and tie it with barke, so that neither wind nor raine may hurt it.

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