It does best on a deep rich soil in a fully-exposed position, and prune back hard early in April.
It is not exactly a swamp tree, but it does best in damp situations where the ground is moist and cool in summer.
It does best in the redwood belt where fogs from the Pacific ocean keep the air moist and the ground damp.
Although it will grow in almost any soil, it does best in a deep, free, moist, sandy clay.
It does best in a peat border, and may be increased by well-ripened seed or by division.
Any soil or situation suits it, but it does best in a light mould and a moist, shady position, or under trees.
This singular and delightfully fragrant annual does best in a mixture of loam, peat, and sand, or sandy loam and leaf-mould.
Naturally, it does best in good land, but there are hundreds of cases where trees are doing well and bearing heavily on land that is by no means fruit land.
It is grown in many places along the coast, as well as in the foothills country of the coastal range, but it does best in situations that more nearly resemble its natural habitat--viz.
It does best on a free, warm soil of fair quality, though it may be grown anywhere with care, and often thrives well in very poor soils with the addition of manure.
Like the other tropical fruits already described, it does best in our warmer parts, coming to maturity earlier, and producing better fruit.
It does best in sandy soil, and is readily increased from suckers, which are usually plentifully produced by old plants.
Planted at the base of a southern wall it does best, and where it thrives it is certainly one of our handsomest half-hardy shrubs.
It does best as a wall plant, and several beautiful examples may be seen in and around London, as also at Exeter, and in the South of Ireland.
It does best in a warm situation, such as planted against a wall facing south.
All growers of varieties of this species agree that it does best on light sandy or alluvial soils; and while it may grow on rather heavy clays, if all other conditions are favorable, its vigor will be lessened.
Seemingly it does best in deep, dry, sandy or gravelly clays and cannot be grown in damp, rich, black soils on the one hand nor poor sands or gravels on the other.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "does best" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.