THE FARMER'S MAGAZINE. 



159 



ference to the cold, wet, or damp gtouud. Each enclosure 

 was 15 yards in length by 9 m breadth. The turnips selected 

 for their use were procured from part of a field of swedes, 

 where the crop, as to size and quality, seemed very much 



alike. So many drills wel/e allotted to each lot 6f sheep, so 

 that the exact amount of turnip-laud cleared by each might 

 at the last be ascertained by measurement. 

 For a few days at first all of the lots had the swedes, after 



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