herefore vertuous.) I vse it rather because it will not breake so
soone, with fals, frosts, or otherwise, and greater vessels of clay
will hardly last.
When you vse your honey, with a spoone take off the skin which it hath
put vp.
And it is worth the regard, that bees thus vsed, if you haue but forty
stockes, shall yeeld you more commodity cleerely than forty acres of
ground. And thus much may suffice, to make good Housewiues loue and haue
good Gardens and Bees.
_Deo Laus._
_FINIS._
The Contents of the Countrey _House-wifes Garden._
Chap. 1. _The Soyle._ _Pag. 77_
Chap. 2. _Site._ _p. 78_
Chap. 3. _Forme._ _p. 79_
Chap. 4. _Quantity._ _p. 85_
Chap. 5. _Fences._ _p. ibid._
Chap. 6. _Two Gardens._ _p. 86_
Chap. 7. _Diuision of herbs._ _p. 88_
Chap. 8. _The Husbandry of herbes._ _p. ibid._
Chap. 9. _Generall rules._ _p. 96_
Chap. 10. _The Husbandry of Bees._ _p. 98_
_Bee-house._ _p. 98._
_Hiues._ _p. 100._
_Hiuing of Bees._ _p. ibid._
_Spelkes._ _p. 101._
_Catching._ _p. 102._
_Clustering._ _p. 103._
_Droanes._ _p. 104._
_Annoyances._ _p. 105._
_Taking of Bees._ _p. 106._
_Straining honey._ _p. ibid._
_Vessels._ _p. ibid._
A MOST PROFITABLE
NEWE TREATISE,
From approued experience of the art
_of propagating Plants: by_
Simon Harward.
CHAP. 1.
_The Art of propagating Plants._
{SN: 1.}
There are foure sorts of Planting, or propagating, as in laying of
shootes or little branches, whiles they are yet tender in some pit made
at their foote, as shall be sayd hereafter, or vpon a little ladder or
Basket of earth, tyed to the bottome of the branch, or in boaring a
Willow thorow, and putting the branch of the tree into the hole, as
shall be fully declared in the Chapter of Grafting.
{SN: 2.}
There are likewise seasons to propagate in; but the best is in the
Spring, and _March_, when the trees are in the Flower, and doe begin to
grow lusty. The young planted Siens or little Grafts must be propagated
i
|