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1. Horfe-beansi 



2. Wheat, with 



3. Clover, or other graffes. 



He pays 3s. per buftiel dibbling beans. 



Mr. Young carries all his hay and corn in one- 

 horfe puts or carts, with a waggon-like apparatus 

 on the body ; and thinks them more commodious 

 than waggons. 



His fheep-fold, for winter, for a hundred fiieep, 

 is littered with wheat-ftubble daily in rainy weather, 

 or as often as needful. It is partly under cover, 

 where are racks for hay. He feldom gives them 

 turnips there 5 they are put in late in evenings, and 

 out early in mornings, in dry weather. In wet, 

 they have hay always 5 and turnips only in very 

 fnowy or ftormy weather^ depending moftly on hay 

 in the fold. 



A farmer would do well to learn of Mr. Young 

 to make more dung than ordinary, and better. He 

 lets his dung-heaps lie dry at bottom, daily throw- 

 ing upon them the water of the cattle, having ihoots 

 to carry off the rain from the hanging roofs of his 

 ox-ftalls, entirely out of the court, without carry- 

 ing off any of the richnefs of the dung. He has 

 gutters behind his cattle in the ftalls, which convey 



their 



