CHAP. 39. (26.)—TREATMENT OF THE DISEASES OF TREES.
Having set forth the various maladies by which trees are attacked, it seems only proper to mention the most appropriate
remedies as well. Some of these remedies may be applied to
all kinds of trees in common, while others, again, are peculiar
to some only. The methods that are common to them all, are,
baring the roots, or moulding them up, thus admitting the air
or keeping it away, as the case may be; giving them water, or
depriving them of it, refreshing them with the nutritious juices
of manure, and lightening them of their burdens by pruning.
The operation, too, of bleeding,[1] as it were, is performed upon
them by withdrawing their juices, and the bark is scraped all
round[2] to improve them. In the vine, the stock branches are
sometimes lengthened out, and at other times repressed; the
buds too are smoothed, and in a measure polished up, in case
the cold weather has made them rough and scaly. These remedies are better suited to some kinds of trees and less so to
others: thus the cypress, for instance, has a dislike to water,
and manifests an aversion to manure, spading round it, pruning,
and, indeed, remedial operations of every kind; nay, what is
more, it is killed by irrigation, while, on the other hand, the
vine and the pomegranate receive their principal nutriment
from it. In the fig, again, the tree is nourished by watering,
while the very same thing will make the fruit pine and die:
the almond, too, if the ground is spaded about it, will lose its
blossom. In the same way, too, there must be no digging
about the roots of trees when newly grafted, or indeed until
such time as they are sufficiently strong to bear. Many
trees require that all superfluous burdens should be pruned
away from them, just as we ourselves cut the nails and hair.
Old trees are often cut down to the ground, and then shoot up
again from one of the suckers; this, however, is not the case
with all of them, but only those, the nature of which, as we
have already stated,[3] will admit of it.