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out any broad clover; not that I know it to be a 

 good method, but that I wilhed to lay it down fof 

 fome years, being handy for feeding. The barley 

 yielded me about 3 v quarters per acre. As foon a3 

 the barley was off, I dreffed this field with chalk 

 and compoft of dung and earth feparately, the chalk 

 about eight waggon loads per acre, and the compoft 

 about twelve cart loads ; I had the year following a 

 moft excellent fwarth of grafs. 



No. IV. had been cropped with beans. This I 

 fowed with wheat at three ploughings. After the 

 wheat I had it tilled and' dunged for fummer 

 vetches, of which I had a moft noble crop. When 

 the vetches were off, I had it ploughed three times, 

 and fowed with wheat. 



No. V. a clover-lay, I fowed with wheat at one 

 ploughing; it was very foul, and produced only 

 about three facks per acre. The year following it 

 was turniped. 



No. VI. was a rowetty coarfe pifece of pgifture, 

 that had not been ploughed for fome years. Here 

 I fowed black oats ; the produce was three quarters 

 and a half per acre ; the next year it was fummer- 

 fallowed and fown with turnips. 



No. VII. 



