VOLUMES ONE TO TWENTY-FIVE. 



45 



CR:VNE-FLY. 



Crane-fly, the, J. Curtis on, viii. 413. 



CcANESBiLL, tlic long-stalkcd, its soils and 

 habits (Buckiiian), xvi. 3G0. 



, the jagged-leaved, xvi. 860. 



, the long-leaved, xvi. 360. 



Crawshey oh sheep-rot (' The Country- 

 man's Instructor,' a.d. 1636), xxiii. 71. 



Cream, the clouted, or scalded, of Somer- 

 setshire (Acland), xi. 735. 



, annual produce of (Horsfall), xvii. 



267. 



, analysis of (Voelcker), xxiv. 298. 



Ckeamometee, Quevenne's, described, 

 xxiv. 316. 



Creeping crowfoot, its soils and habits 

 (Buckman), xvi. 360 ; how affected by 

 manures (Ijawes), xx. 265. 



fescue grass, its growth in dift'erent 



situations, xv. 468, xvii. 533-535. 



soft grass, described, xvii. 519. 



Creslow farm, xvi. 294. 



Crested dogstail grass, analysis of (Way"), 

 xiv. 177 ; its habits (Buckman), xvii. 

 521 ; how affected by manures (Lawes), 

 XX. 258. 



Creyke, Ealph, an account of the process 

 of warping by, v. 398. 



Crisp, T., on lupines as food for sheep, 

 XX. 106. 



, the first grower of lupines as a field 



crop in England (Dr. Voelcker), xxi.38y. 



Crobbek or Crovek, a disease of the Cum- 

 berland cows, xiii. 259. 



Crook, W., on the i)henomena of steam, 

 xxiii. 429. 



Cropping, the course of, adojDted in Kent 

 (R. Heathorn), xxi. 385: Mr. Bell's 

 farm, ih. ; autumn cultivation, ib. ; eco- 

 nomy of 1 -horse carts, ih. ; manage- 

 ment of light land on an 8-years' course, 

 386 ; fodder-crops, ib. ; stubble-tuniijis, 

 ib. ; trefoil followed by tmnips, 387 ; 

 stock kept, ib. ; an 8-years' rotation on 

 heavy land, mangold following rye, &c., 

 388. 



Crops, rotation of, &c., in the Netherlands, 

 ii. 43. See " Rotation of crops." 



, on the chemical constituents of, by 



C. Daubeny, lii. 433. 



Cross breeding, see " Breeding, cross." 



Ckosskill, W., on the necessity of care in 

 the preservation of agricultural imple- 

 ments, ii. 150. 



, accounts of the action of his clod- 

 crusher, collected by P. Pusey, iv. 560. 



, liis steam-cultivator, xx. 184. 



Crown estate, at King William's Town, 

 in the counties of Cork and Kerrv, by 

 J. F. Burke, iv. 435. 



Croydon, analysis of sewage from (Way), 

 XV. 155. 



CUMBERLAND. 



Crushers, corn and linseed, shown at the 

 Lewes meeting in 1852, xiii. 325. 



, cake, at Gloucester (1853), xiv. 362. 



, cake and oat, at Lincoln (1854), xv. 



372 ; at Canterbuiy (1860), xxi. 501. 



Cubic measure, table of, vii. 133. 



IDcti-e, see "Nitrate of soda." 



Cuckoo pint, the (Buckman), xvi. 36G. 



Cudweed, the mountain, xvi. 362. 



, the marsli (Buckman), ib. 



CuLLEY, the Messrs., the agriculture of 

 Northumberland mvich beliolden to 

 them, ii. 153. 



, entered on the farm of Wark in 



1786, ii. 158. 



, introduced the Leicester sheep into 



Northumberland about 1766, ii. 174. 



Culm or stem, of grasses (Buckman), xvii. 

 164. 



CuT.TivATioN by steam, see " Steam- 

 culture." 



Cultivators, report on tliose shown at 

 the Great Exhibition in 1851, by P. 

 Pusey, xii. 595 ; Biddle's, 598 ; Cole- 

 man's, 598. 



, those shown at the Lewes meeting 



(1852), xiii. 315. 



at Gloucester meeting (1853), xiv. 



357. 



at Carlisle meeting (1855), xvi. 507, 



524. 



at Chelmsford meeting (1856). xvii. 



567. 



at Paris, ditto, xvii. 41. 



at Warwick meeting (1859), xx. 



320. 



at Newcastle (18()4), xxv. 422. 



Cumberland, on the farming of, a prize 

 essay, by William Dickinson, xiii. 207 ; 

 its soils and strata, ib. ; new red sand- 

 stone, gypsum, coal-fields, 208 ; the 

 carl)oniferous limestone of Egremont 

 contains coprolitic nodules, 209 ; lime- 

 stones, ib. ; climate as it affects crops, 

 210; rainfalls, 211; temperature, 213, 

 214; winds, ib.; the "helm wind," 

 215 ; eiiect of elevation on the farming 

 of the county, 215 ; the ancient and 

 the modern farming compared, 218 ; 

 modern farms, ib.; the "Statesmen," 

 the Netherby estate, 221 ; leases, 225 ; 

 the first introduction of turnips in 

 1755, 227 ; growth of, ih. ; the sale of, 

 to be fed oft", 229 ; growth of potatoes, 

 230 ; its wheat crops, 231 ; oats and 

 oatmeal, 232 ; corn harvesting, 233 ; 

 the use of the coiTi-scythe, ih. ; ma- 

 niu-es, 235 ; fences, 238 ; the labourers, 

 239 ; implements, 240 ; the Cumber- 

 laud clod - crusher, 242 ; carts, 243 ; 

 horse - harness of former times, 245; 



