NOPE ES: 525 other eng pute. The general conclufion will be the fame, whether it be{up- they came, pofed to be above or below the truth. It muft vary in different cart down cafes. ty but ally(9 page 269.) bb differs from fhallow in this refpet. Ebb ‘good wa. denotes a{mall depth in a folid body; /hallow the fame of a fluid,
Therefore we fay an eld furrow, and a Shallow pool. €, itisin-|(p> page 355.) Though I think it beft in general to obtain loving ores young plants from nurferies, and therefore do not in the text en- esa: es: sof ald| ter into the minutie of raifing them from feeds; yet where very 0d. The| extenfive plantations are to be made, it will be beft to raife the 1 1" p= raft young plants. This has been the practice for many years paf{t
by the Duke of Athol, who has made more extenfive plantations
A idee of larch trees than perhaps any other perfon in Europe: the mode UI relpetting:: as” of rearing them at Dunkeld is as follows:
: be Dunkeld method of raifing larches in the nurfery.—* A well dug set" bed in your nurfery garden being prepared, three inches deep of the ee earth muft be removed from the furface of the bed, with a fpade ores iB or the back of a rake: place the earth round the edges of the bed, labouring.!. and beat the bed with the flat fpade. In the month of March, or wound may| beginning of April, lay the cones very thick and quite clofe to or when very covering one another on the bed. About 10 or 14 days, or three ar circum= weeks, according to the weather, you will find the cones have dropt the former| a great deal of feed on the bed; rake them off, and lay them on nd the fice another bed prepared in the fame manner; then, with the rake, draw ances had the earth over the firft bed;_ proceed in the fame manner with the onfequence fecond bed, and you may expect a full crop of larch plants or feed- cafe, would lings:—cover them with ftraw or fhilling-feeds, during winter,— the fafon, fet them remain next fummer in the feed bed,—tranfplant them nurable, he the following{pring or autumn,—when they have been tranfplant- ed two fummers, plant them out in your plantation ground,— fe counties make a{mall pit for them to loofen the earth, and fet them into m inclined the hole, replacing the turf, cut in two, and with the earthy fide vill not dit/


