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A New Orchard And Garden
by William Lawson
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In a cold Countrey graft later, and in a warme Countrey earlier.

The best time generall is from the first of February, vntill the first of May.

The grafts must alwaies be gathered, in the old of the Moone.

For grafts choose shootes of a yeere old, or at the furthermost two yeeres old.

If you must carry grafts farre, pricke them into a Turnep newly gathered, or lay earth about the ends.

If you set stones of Plummes, Almonds, Nuts, or Peaches: First let them lye a little in the Sunne, and then steepe them in Milke or Water, three or foure dayes before you put them into the earth.

Dry the kernels of Pippins, and sow them in the end of Nouember.

The stone of a Plum-tree must be set a foot deepe in Nouember, or February.

The Date-stone must be set the great end downwards, two cubits deepe in the earth, in a place enriched with dung.

The Peach-stone would be set presently after the Fruit is eaten, some quantity of the flesh of the Peach remaining about the stone.

If you will haue it to be excellent, graft it afterward vpon an Almond tree.

The little Siens of Cherry-trees, grown thicke with haire, rots, and those also which doe grow vp from the rootes of the great Cherry-trees, being remoued, doe grow better and sooner then they which come of stones: but they must be remoued and planted while they are but two or three yeeres old, the branches must be lopped.



The Contents of the Art of Propagating Plants.

The Art of propagating Plants. page 109.

Grafting in the Barke. p. 111.

Grafting in the cleft. p. 113.

Grafters Tooles.

Time of planting & seting.

Time of grafting.

How to cut the stumps in grafting.

Sprouts and imps: how gathered.

Grafting like a Scutcheon. p. 116.

Inoculation in the Barke.

Emplaister-wise grafting.

To pricke stickes to beare the first yeere.

To haue Cherries or Plums without stones.

To make Quinces great.

To set stones of Plummes.

Dates, Nut, and Peaches.

To make fruit smell well.

To plant Cherry-trees.



THE HVSBAND MANS FRVITEFVLL ORCHARD.



For the true ordering of all sorts of Fruits in their due seasons; and how double increase commeth by care in gathering yeere after yeare: as also the best way of carriage by land or by water: With their preseruation for longest continuance.

{SN: Cherries.} Of all stone Fruit, Cherries are the first to be gathered: of which, though we reckon foure sorts; English, Flemish, Gascoyne and Blacke, yet are they reduced to two, the early, and the ordinary: the earely are those whose grafts came first from France and Flanders, and are now ripe with vs in May: the ordinary is our owne naturall Cherry, and is not ripe before Iune; they must be carefully kept from Birds, either with nets, noise, or other industry.

{SN: Gathering of Cheries.} They are not all ripe at once, nor may be gathered at once, therefore with a light Ladder, made to stand of it selfe, without hurting the boughes, mount to the tree, and with a gathering hooke, gather those which be full ripe, and put them into your Cherry-pot, or Kybzey hanging by your side, or vpon any bough you please, and be sure to breake no stalke, but that the cherry hangs by; and pull them gently, lay them downe tenderly, and handle them as little as you can.

{SN: To carry Cherries.} For the conueyance or portage of Cherries, they are best to be carried in broad Baskets like siues, with smooth yeelding bottomes, onely two broad laths going along the bottome: and if you doe transport them by ship, or boate, let not the siues be fil'd to the top, lest setting one vpon another, you bruise and hurt the Cherries: if you carry by horse-backe, then panniers well lined with Fearne, and packt full and close is the best and safest way.

{SN: Other stone-fruit.} Now for the gathering of all other stone-fruite, as Nectarines, Apricockes, Peaches, Peare-plumbes, Damsons, Bullas, and such like, although in their seuerall kinds, they seeme not to be ripe at once on one tree: yet when any is ready to drop from the tree, though the other seeme hard, yet they may also be gathered, for they haue receiued the full substance the tree can giue them; and therefore the day being faire, and the dew drawne away; set vp your Ladder, and as you gathered your Cherries, so gather them: onely in the bottomes of your large siues, where you part them, you shall lay Nettles, and likewise in the top, for that will ripen those that are most vnready.

{SN: Gathering of Peares.} In gathering of Peares are three things obserued; to gather for expence, for transportation, or to sell to the Apothecary. If for expence, and your owne vse, then gather them as soone as they change, and are as it were halfe ripe, and no more but those which are changed, letting the rest hang till they change also: for thus they will ripen kindely, and not rot so soone, as if they were full ripe at the gathering. But if your Peares be to be transported farre either by Land or Water, then pull one from the tree, and cut it in the middest, and if you finde it hollow about the choare, and the kernell a large space to lye in: although no Peare be ready to drop from the tree, yet then they may be gathered, and then laying them on a heape one vpon another, as of necessity they must be for transportation, they will ripen of themselues, and eate kindly: but gathered before, they will wither, shrinke and eate rough, losing not onely their taste, but beauty.

Now for the manner of gathering; albeit some climb into the trees by the boughes, and some by Ladder, yet both is amisse: the best way is with the Ladder before spoken of, which standeth of it selfe, with a basket and a line, which being full, you must gently let downe, and keeping the string still in your hand, being emptied, draw it vp againe, and so finish your labour, without troubling your selfe, or hurting the tree.

{SN: Gathering of Apples.} Now touching the gathering of Apples, it is to be done according to the ripening of the fruite; your Summer apples first, and the Winter after.

For Summer fruit, when it is ripe, some will drop from the tree, and birds will be picking at them: But if you cut one of the greenest, and finde it as was shew'd you before of the Peare: then you may gather them, and in the house they will come to their ripenesse and perfection. For your Winter fruit, you shall know the ripenesse by the obseruation before shewed; but it must be gathered in a faire, Sunny, and dry day, in the waine of the Moone, and no Wind in the East, also after the deaw is gone away: for the least wet or moysture will make them subiect to rot and mildew: also you must haue an apron to gather in, and to empty into the great baskets, and a hooke to draw the boughes vnto you, which you cannot reach with your hands at ease: the apron is to be an Ell euery way, loopt vp to your girdle, so as it may serue for either hand without any trouble: and when it is full, vnloose one of your loopes, and empty it gently into the great basket, for in throwing them downe roughly, their owne stalkes may pricke them; and those which are prickt, will euer rot. Againe, you must gather your fruit cleane without leaues or brunts, because the one hurts the tree, for euery brunt would be a stalke for fruit to grow vpon: the other hurts the fruit by bruising, and pricking it as it is layd together, and there is nothing sooner rotteth fruit, then the greene and withered leaues lying amongst them; neither must you gather them without any stalke at all: for such fruit will begin to rot where the stalke stood.

{SN: To vse the fallings.} For such fruit as falleth from the trees, and are not gathered, they must not be layd with the gathered fruit: and of fallings there are two sorts, one that fals through ripenesse, and they are best, and may be kept to bake or roast; the other windfals, and before they are ripe, and they must be spent as they are gathered, or else they will wither and come to nothing: and therefore it is not good by any meanes to beate downe fruit with Poales, or to carrie them in Carts loose and iogging or in sacks where they may be bruised.

{SN: Carriage of fruit.} When your fruit is gathered, you shall lay them in deepe Baskets of Wicker, which shall containe foure or sixe bushels, and so betweene two men, carry them to your Apple-Loft, and in shooting or laying them downe, be very carefull that it be done with all gentlenesse, and leasure, laying euery sort of fruit seuerall by it selfe: but if there be want of roome hauing so many sorts that you cannot lay them seuerally, then such some fruite as is neerest in taste and colour, and of Winter fruit, such as will taste alike, may if need require, be laid together, and in time you may separate them, as shall bee shewed hereafter. But if your fruit be gathered faire from your Apple-Loft, them must the bottomes of your Baskets be lined with greene Ferne, and draw the stuborne ends of the same through the Basket, that none but the soft leafe may touch the fruit, and likewise couer the tops of the Baskets with Ferne also, and draw small cord ouer it, that the Ferne may not fall away, nor the fruit scatter out, or iogge vp and downe: and thus you may carry fruit by Land or by Water, by Boat, or Cart, as farre as you please: and the Ferne doth not onely keepe them from bruising, but also ripens them, especially Peares. When your fruit is brought to your Apple-Loft or store house, if you finde them not ripened enough, then lay them in thicker heapes vpon Fearne, and couer them with Ferne also: and when they are neere ripe, then vncouer them, and make the heapes thinner, so as the ayre may passe thorow them: and if you will not hasten the ripening of them, then lay them on the boords without any Fearne at all. Now for Winter, or long lasting Peares, they may be packt either in Ferne or Straw, and carried whither you please; and being come to the iourneys end must be laid vpon sweet straw; but beware the roome be not too warme, nor windie, and too cold, for both are hurtfull: but in a temperate place, where they may haue ayre, but not too much.

{SN: Of Wardens.} Wardens are to be gathered, carried, packt, and laid as Winter Peares are.

{SN: Of Medlers.} Medlers are to be gathered about Michaelmas, after a frost hath toucht them; at which time they are in their full growth, and will then be dropping from the tree, but neuer ripe vpon the tree. When they are gathered, they must be laid in a basket, siue, barrell, or any such caske, and wrapt about with woollen cloths, vnder, ouer, and on all sides, and also some waight laid vpon them, with a boord betweene: for except they be brought into a heat, they will neuer ripen kindly or taste well.

Now when they haue laine till you thinke some of them be ripe, the ripest, still as they ripen, must be taken from the rest: therefore powre them out into another siue or basket leasurely, that so you may well finde them that be ripest, letting the hard one fall into the other basket, and those which be ripe laid aside: the other that be halfe ripe, seuer also into a third siue or basket: for if the ripe and halfe ripe be kept together, the one will be mouldy, before the other be ripe: And thus doe, till all be throughly ripe.

{SN: Of Quinces.} Quinces should not be laid with other fruite; for the sent is offensiue both to other fruite, and to those that keepe the fruite or come amongst them: therefore lay them by themselues vpon sweet strawe, where they may haue ayre enough: they must be packt like Medlers, and gathered with Medlers.

{SN: To packe Apples.} Apples must be packt in Wheat or Rye-straw, and in maunds or baskets lyned with the same, and being gently handled, will ripen with such packing and lying together. If seuerall sorts of apples be packt in one maund or basket, then betweene euery sort, lay sweet strawe of a pretty thicknesse.

{SN: Emptying and laying apples.} Apples must not be powred out, but with care and leasure: first, the straw pickt cleane from them, and then gently take out euery seuerall sort, and place them by themselues: but if for want of roome you mixe the sorts together, then lay those together that are of equall lasting; but if they haue all one taste, then they need no separation. Apples that are not of the like colours should not be laid together, and if any such be mingled, let it be amended, and those which are first ripe, let them be first spent; and to that end, lay those apples together, that are of one time ripening: and thus you must vse Pippins also, yet will they endure bruises better then other fruit, and whilst they are greene will heale one another.

{SN: Difference in Fruit.} Pippins though they grow of one tree, and in one ground, yet some will last better then other some, and some will bee bigger then others of the same kinde, according as they haue more or lesse of the Sunne, or more or lesse of the droppings of the trees or vpper branches: therefore let euery one make most of that fruite which is fairest, and longest lasting. Againe, the largenesse and goodnesse of fruite consists in the age of the tree: for as the tree increaseth, so the fruite increaseth in bignesse, beauty, taste, and firmnesse: and otherwise, as it decreaseth.

{SN: Transporting fruit by water.} If you be to transport your fruit farre by water, then prouide some dry hogges-heads or barrells, and packe in your apples, one by one with your hand, that no empty place may be left, to occasion sogging; and you must line your vessell at both ends with fine sweet straw; but not the sides, to auoid heat: and you must bore a dozen holes at either end, to receiue ayre so much the better; and by no meanes let them take wet. Some vse, that transport beyond seas, to shut the fruite vnder hatches vpon straw: but it is not so good, if caske may be gotten.

{SN: When not to transport fruit.} It is not good to transport fruite in March, when the wind blowes bitterly, nor in frosty weather, neither in the extreme heate of Summer.

{SN: To conuay small store of fruit.} If the quantity be small you would carry, then you may carry them in Dossers or Panniers, prouided they be euer filled close, and that Cherries and Peares be lined with greene Fearne, and Apples with sweete straw; and that, but at the bottomes and tops, not on the sides.

{SN: Roomes for fruite.} Winter fruite must lye neither too hot, nor too cold; too close, nor too open: for all are offensiue. A lowe roome or Cellar that is sweet, and either boorded or paued, and not too close, is good, from Christmas till March: and roomes that are seeled ouer head, and from the ground, are good from March till May: then the Cellar againe, from May till Michaelmas. The apple loft would be seeled or boorded, which if it want, take the longest Rye-straw, and raise it against the walles, to make a fence as high as the fruite lyeth; and let it be no thicker then to keepe the fruite from the wall, which being moyst, may doe hurt, or if not moist, then the dust is offensiue.

{SN: Sorting of Fruit.} There are some fruite which will last but vntill Allhallontide: they must be laid by themselues; then those which will last till Christmas, by themselues: then those which will last till it be Candlemas, by themselues: those that will last till Shrouetide, by themselues: and Pippins, Apple-Iohns, Peare-maines, and Winter-Russettings, which will last all the yeere by themselues.

Now if you spy any rotten fruite in your heapes, pick them out, and with a Trey for the purpose, see you turne the heapes ouer, and leaue not a tainted Apple in them, diuiding the hardest by themselues, and the broken skinned by themselues to be first spent, and the rotten ones to be cast away; and euer as you turne them, and picke them, vnder-lay them with fresh straw: thus shall you keepe them safe for your vse, which otherwise would rot suddenly.

{SN: Times of stirring fruit.} Pippins, Iohn Apples, Peare maines, and such like long lasting fruit, need not to be turned till the weeke before Christmas, vnlesse they be mixt with other of a riper kind, or that the fallings be also with them, or much of the first straw left amongst them: the next time of turning is at Shroue-tide, and after that, once a moneth till Whitson-tide; and after that, once a fortnight; and euer in the turning, lay your heapes lower and lower, and your straw very thinne: prouided you doe none of this labour in any great frost, except it be in a close Celler. At euery thawe, all fruit is moyst, and then they must not be touched: neither in rainy weather, for then they will be danke also: and therefore at such seasons it is good to set open your windowes, and doores, that the ayre may haue free passage to dry them, as at nine of the clocke in the fore-noone in Winter; and at sixe in the fore-noone, and at eight at night in Summer: onely in March, open not your windowes at all.

All lasting fruite, after the middest of May, beginne to wither, because then they waxe dry, and the moisture gone, which made them looke plumpe: they must needes wither, and be smaller; and nature decaying, they must needes rot. And thus much touching the ordering of fruites.

FINIS.

* * * * *

IC

LONDON,

Printed by Nicholas Okes for IOHN HARISON, at the golden Vnicorne in Pater-noster-row. 1631.



{Transcriber's notes

The following corrections have been made:

Title page "carring home" changed to "carrying home".

Sig. A2r "SIR HENRY BELOSSES" possible error for "SIR HENRY BELLOSES"; not changed.

Sig. A3v "how ancient, how, profitable," changed to "how ancient, how profitable,".

"Roses on Thornes. and such like," changed to "Roses on Thornes, and such like,".

Sig. A4r "Of bough Setts." changed to "Of bought Setts." for consistency with the text.

Sig. A4v Page number for "Of Foyling" in Chapter 12 changed from 53 to 51, for consistency with the text.

Page number for "Of Flowers, Borders, Mounts &c." in Chapter 17 changed from 71 to 70, for consistency with the text.

Chapter 1, page 3 "other offall, that fruit" changed to "all other of that fruit"

Chapter 2, page 3 "nor searcely with Quinces," changed to "nor scarcely with Quinces,".

"(not well ordered," changed to "(not well ordered)".

Page 5 "will pu forth suckers" changed to "will put forth suckers".

Page 6 "become manure to your ground" changed to "become manure to your ground.".

"15. or 18 inches deepe" changed to "15. or 18. inches deepe".

Chapter 3, page 6 "(as is before described," changed to "(as is before described)".

Page 7 "in Holland and Zealand" the "a" in "and" is italicised in the original.

"Our old fathers can telvs" changed to "Our old fathers can tel vs".

Page 8 "chuse your ground low Or if you be forced" changed to "chuse your ground low: Or if you be forced".

Page 10 "(for trees are the greatest suckers & pillers of earth," changed to "(for trees are the greatest suckers & pillers of earth)".

Chapter 7, page 18 "for commonly your bur-knots are summer fruit)" changed to "(for commonly your bur-knots are summer fruit)".

Page 20 "arse from some taw" changed to "arise from some taw".

Page 21 "I could not mislke this kind" changed to "I could not mislike this kind".

Page 27 "Let not you stakes" changed to "Let not your stakes".

"or of auy other thing" changed to "or of any other thing".

Chapter 8, page 29 "forty or fity yeares" changed to "forty or fifty yeares".

"alotted to his felllow" changed to "alotted to his fellow".

Page 30 "vpward out of he earth" changed to "vpward out of the earth".

Chapter 9, page 32 "they are more subiect," changed to "they are more subiect to,".

Chapter 10, page 33 "commonly called a Graft)" changed to "(commonly called a Graft)".

Chapter 11, page 43 "(nay more) such as mens" changed to "(nay more, such as mens".

Page 46 "It stayes it nothing at al" changed to "It stayes it nothing at all.".

Chapter 12, page 53 "wastes cotinually" changed to "wastes continually".

Chapter 13, page 57 "take sprig and all (for" changed to "take sprig and all: for".

Page 58 "cleanse his foile" changed to "cleanse his soile".

Chapter 14, page 63 "growth: for cut them" changed to "growth: (for cut them".

Page 64 "to inlarge their frust" changed to "to inlarge their fruit".

Chapter 16, page 67 "Orchrad shall exceed" changed to "Orchard shall exceed"

Chapter 17, page 70 "double double Cowslips" not changed.

The Country Housewifes Garden Chapter 8, page 90 "drunke to kill itches" changed to "drunke) to kill itches".

Page 94 "It floweth at Michael-tide" changed to "It flowreth at Michael-tide".

Page 95 "Cur moritur homo, cum saluia crescit in horto?" not changed. Possible error for "... cui saluia ...".

Chapter 9, page 97 "for then they are too too tender" not changed.

Chapter 10, page 99 "the Beees lye out" changed to "the Bees lye out".

Page 100 "Neither would the hiue be too too great" not changed.

Page 102 "hey cannot come downe" changed to "they cannot come downe".

Page 103 "claspes are loose in the Stapes" not changed.

Page 106 "combes into a siue" changed to "combes) into a siue".

The Art of propagating plants Chapter 3, page 116 The last side note has been changed from "1." to "11.".

Chapter 4, page 120 "aud these shall stay" changed to "and these shall stay".

"sowre Cherry treee" changed to "sowre Cherry tree".

The Husband mans fruitefull orchard Page 125 "Gascoyne and Blacke" changed to "Gascoyne and Blacke".

Page 126 "if you doe trasport them" changed to "if you doe transport them".

"Nertarines, Apricockes" changed to "Nectarines, Apricockes". }

THE END

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