F 926 4 
feeds put in two feet apart from each other) then 
the tenant fhould be obliged to plant one of thefe 
trees, in the place of every pollard, decayed or 
lopped tree, the tenant takes down; and when a 
hedge fhall be made new, or an old hedge cut down 
and remade, let fo many of the young trees out of 
the plantation as the landlord fhall appoint, be taken 
up and planted at proper diftances in the hedge, 
and in time thefe trees thus planted, will, proclaim 
their benefit to the landlord and to the public. 
Your’s, &c. B. PUGH. 
N. B. The black withey makes the beft hedge 
ftakes that can be ufed, becaufe they are ftrait and 
handy, and will all grow, whereas all other ftakes, in 
three or four years, rot and become ufelefs, and a 
temptation to hedge-breakers. 
ArTIcLe XX. 
On the Reclaimation of a-Snipe Bog. 
[By THomas Sout, efq; in a Letter to the Secretary.] 
DEAR SIR, Boffington, Aug. 9, 1794. 
N compliance with your requeft, fignified in your 
favour of the 6th, accept for the feventh vol. 
of the fociety’s papers, the particulars of a thorough 
reclaimation, 
