Gardening for Pleasure : a Guide to the Amateur in the Fruit, Vegetable, And Flower Garden, With Full Directions for the Greenhouse, Conservatory, And Window-Garden

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139 which in all probability will give a crop quite as soon, if not sooner, than the large ones. The manner of j)lant- ing the vine is similar to that of setting any other tree or shrub. The ground must be thoroughly broken up, not in a mere hole only sufficient to hold the roots, but if a regular border has not been made, the place where each vine is to be planted, should not be less than three feet in diameter, and if double that, all the better, and to the depth of not less than a foot. On r
...eceiving the vine from the nursery, it may consist of one or more shoots.
Fig. 54. — VINE WITH TWO SHOOTS, Fig. 55.— VINE WITH ARMS.
but on planting it should be cut back to only two or three eyes or buds. On starting to grow, all of these buds or eyes should be rubbed off except one, selecting the strong- est. Train this shoot perpendicularly to a stake the first year of its growth, the next fall, when the leaves drop, cut it back to nine or ten inches from the ground. When the vine starts the next spring, rub off all eyes or buds except two, which during the season will form two canes, as in fig.


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