t H ] 



No. VIl. a mixture of fandy and gravelly foil^ 

 \ was frdm a wheat-ftubble fummer- fallowed, well 

 dunged, and Town with turnips, as was alfo 



No. VIII. which was drained and chalked. The 

 turnips on both were remarkably good. No. VII. 

 was the next year turned into a garden, and bore 

 very large crops of potatoes, Windfor beans, car- 

 rots, cabbages, and parfnips, but a very few onions> 

 which I apprehend was as much owing to want of 

 care as any thing elfe; among the beans I tried 

 fome turnips, but they were not good, being in ge- 

 neral worm-eaten, and fticky or ftringy* 



No. IX. part of which was an orchard, was alfo 

 in grafs: this I dunged well, and planted with 

 beans, thinking to fummer-fallow for turnips the 

 next year, but in this I altered my mind, and fowed 

 winter vetches, which anfwered mod incomparably 

 well, cut for horfcs, and for feeding the fows and 

 pigs. The beans produced rather more than four 

 quarters per acre: they were hoed three times, which 

 did them great good, but deftroyed no couch. 

 After the vetches, I fummer- fallowed for turnips. 



No.X. was a meadow which had been ftrangely 



negledledi a brook ran through it, and frequently 



Vol. I. G over- 



